New York Shenanigans

Staying in New York

Movie – Fireflies in the Garden

Posted by rickiej on June 9, 2009

I had not heard of this film but was desperate to find an alternative to the banal movies that take over school holiday weeks.

It had Julia Roberts in it so I wasn’t too bothered about the story line but I already knew that her character dies in a car crash at the start of the film and the rest of the plot is about her grown up son trying to work out why he had such an appalling relationship with his father; why he loathed him.

It was one of those films that went back and forth in time but it was easy to follow as it showed the son as grown-up bearded, married writer and then back to a geeky child.

I don’t think he ever figured out why his father, played by Willem Dafoe – so I should have known he’d be a bad man, was so mean and yet at the same time adored his much younger sister. I also didn’t work out why his Mum’s younger sister, his Aunt Jane, his best friend since the childhood summer Jane lived with them, moved into his parent’s home whilst they went elsewhere. I guess because it was a bigger home for her much young children but I don’t recall it ever being explained yet it was pivotal when he went back there during the time of his Mother’s funeral.

It was mostly an easy-going movie with a few of those twists and turns that make a good story.

7/10

Smile factor 7/10

Posted in Movies | Leave a Comment »

Book – Toast by Nigel Slater

Posted by rickiej on June 8, 2009

 

I had come across this book before but not having any knowledge on the author, I hadn’t picked it up.

The title intrigued me to choose it up this time plus I have my resolve to read a book per week. It is an autobiography, or rather a memoir as I have been taught in writing class, but in a totally unusual way which is exactly how I want to write at least one of my books although I won’t eat into that just now.

Each chapter regales a story from his childhood by relating it to food which I loved but what was really interesting was the humour laced throughout. Even the sad events of both his parents passing and anecdotes of the gold digging, wicked step mother didn’t fudge the humour. His distaste for his Father’s second choice of bride is clearly evident although I doubt if this book would have been written if his parents were still alive, as much as he adored his mother despite her handicap in the kitchen.

I love food so entirely understood his passion for both discovering new tastes and savouring every morsel of all his favourites through the years. It started in the 1970’s so it was full of prawn cocktail, trifle and worst of all cheese and pineapple on sticks before moving to the steaks and profiteroles with hot chocolate sauce in the excessive 1980s.

Profiteroles with hot chocolate sauce, now that sounds good to me now.

8½/10

Inspiration 8/10 (Mainly to write my own)

Posted in Books | Leave a Comment »

Diary – May 31st 2009

Posted by rickiej on June 5, 2009

A couple of weeks ago I actually started looking at my Twitter account that I started last summer. Now I do a daily tweet to help spread the word about business so if my notes help someone or if it means I make a few new acquaintances, it’s all good.

Talking of business, last week I got word of a local temp contract that would be a perfect addition to my fast diminishing clients that have been ‘crunched’. I super sleuthed my way to speaking to the Operations Director who duly asked to meet with me. Having worked out what I could possibly wear out of the handful of business outfits I have with me (the rest if you remember are amongst my shipping that at the moment is still at large in New York). I remembered I have absolutely no suitable business shoes. I don’t want to buy anything as I already have ample of everything that I have spent a small fortune to ship. I managed to pull an outfit together before researching the company and preparing from my meeting the next morning. First thing on Friday, I emailed my now customary polite ‘I look forward to seeing you later’ confirmation message and within seconds my mobile rang. The Ops Director cancelled the meeting as they think an internal colleague can do the work rather than outsourcing to me. Without knowing anything about her, I have the feeling she won’t have the management experience to deal with the project (otherwise, she’d already being doing something similar) so I have a sense that I may well get called upon at a later date. Whether I’ll be in a position to take on the work then, who knows?

My concern anyway was being able to take all the time off I want to spend with Country Boy – when he ever gets here. I’m a little more confident of his arrival now that he has sent his passport to be renewed but it’s taken me being stuck in the UK for 6 weeks for him to do that. Should I take that as he’s not committed to coming over and keeping this thing between us going or just that he’s a bloke?

He did send me the words to the Kinks (his absolute musical heroes), ‘So Tired of Waiting for You’ which bought some tears to my eye but afterwards I wasn’t sure if he meant it in the sentiment I first thought or if he is indeed fed up and thinking of moving on. I know that he was planning to go to a www.meetup.com event in New York –similar to the one where we met last Christmas because I happened to catch the email invite which had him down as RSVPing yes.

Having said that, he has work commitments until the third week of June anyway.

 

Missing in Action 1

My blackberry that should have arrived last week hadn’t showed. If you remember my Blackberry was stolen on my first business day of arriving back in the UK on 20th April. Amazon told me to let them know if it hadn’t arrived by Monday but I gave it an extra day, as that was a public holiday and filed my complaint on Tuesday.  On Wednesday they acknowledged my complaint. On Thursday they issued a refund which for some reason will take 10 days to get to me, even though when I paid for it the money was taken out of my account immediately, on Friday the Blackberry arrived. Oops.

I’m no longer chained to my laptop.

Missing in Action 2

Talking of lost in the post, the $500 cash that I had sent by secure insured mail to my friend in the US, Jersey Girl, who kindly agreed to pay it into my US bank account still hasn’t arrived.  I had the cash ready for my return trip and it wasn’t worth exchanging it back to sterling. The birthday card with gift card I sent in exactly the same way to Country Boy a few days later turned up in the usual week or so. I’ve been told I have to wait another couple of weeks before filing the claim on that one. Let’s hope if turns up before then though I suspect it’s sitting with customs for no particular reason.

Lazing on Sunny Afternoon

It was another glorious sunny and warm weekend, even more so than last week but as much as I love the sunshine and embrace it like any other Brit, I don’t like the heat and take care to be comfortable when enjoying any sunny English days.

I enjoyed strolling into the city on Saturday to the sound of the must listen-to Jonathan Ross on Radio 2 in my ears but also to avoid having any meaningless unwanted conversations with strangers as I walk along Broad Street. I went into Birmingham  Museum and Art Gallery first having missed out last week with the lovely distraction of the Pride parade. In particular I wanted to see the Obama’s People exhibition which turned out to be a collection of photographs of his staff. I was fascinated and read almost every word of each profile next to the portrait. The best thing was that it felt like I was back in the US for at least an hour. But is it art?

I guess I’d conclude that the pictures of Washington were slightly better than mine from trip last Christmas.

Afterwards I decided to see more of the gallery with a view to coming back most weekends to see more over the summer – a little like I did when I was here last summer. I loved the Birmingham through the age’s exhibit in particular the gorgeous kitchen from 1961. Very much in tune with the current marketing campaign for Marks and Spencer125 year celebrations and I was beaming both with my memories of the incredibly similar childhood kitchen, although ours was toxic blue rather than their more serene red and also thinking of what my next kitchen Stateside may look like. I’d just be happy with this one. By now I was ravenous but saw a few more exhibits, in particular how Birmingham rebuilt the Bull Ring shopping area into what is now the extraordinary ‘Bull Ring’ complete with state of the art purpose built Selfridges before settling into the Edwardian Tea Room – a place that could be a lot more alluring than it is but it still attracts me each time I visit.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a Comment »

Book – Lance Armstrong – It’s Not About The Bike

Posted by rickiej on June 1, 2009

Over the years people have told me that this is the most inspiring autobiography/sports autobiography/book ever. I would probably give Johnny Mac’s ‘Serious’ that prize but this was good.

My first book in an age and I now plan to stick with my book a week goal. I started the next one the very next day.

Yes the boy done good because he fought cancer. Or rather the doctors and medicine fought cancer as he put it but he sure had the absolute determination to live. I feel determination and belief go a long way in achieving what you want.

I’m not quite sure of the hype surrounding his come back. What was he supposed to do? Become a bartender? Become a beach bum or carry on doing what he had trained for? Yes he came back better than ever because he was ecstatic to be alive. Wouldn’t you be?

All in all the book was inspiring and a lesson in that we should all get off our buts, stop moaning and do something we want to do.

7/10

Inspiration Factor 7 ½/10

Posted in Books, People, Sports | Leave a Comment »

Diary – May 25th 2009

Posted by rickiej on May 29, 2009

Birthday Boy

It’s the boyfriend’s birthday today and I feel sad. I normally feel upbeat after I have spoken to him but not today. I’ve tried to make it nice for him; I’ve sent 3 books related to his musical hero, Ray Davies, of which he has so far received 2, one more than I had hoped.

I knew he wanted clothes and had I been there as planned I would have taken him shopping so instead I cunningly sent him a Marks & Spencer voucher so he has to come here and spend it. But to be sure he received a surprise on his birthday, I sent him an American Eagle voucher, the shop I introduced him to, to buy something to wear for when he comes over to see me – so I can enjoy it too. By the sounds of it, he hasn’t received it, or more likely deleted it as junk mail but I didn’t want to spoil the surprise just yet.

I sent 2 cards; a funny one relating to his bad relationship with computers in which I composed a ‘Purple Ronnie’ style poem. (Another career for me?) and a normal that I don’t recall with the M&S voucher complete with photo of huge cupcake. That should be enough to remind him of me.

I was going to arrange for a bouquet of balloons to be delivered on the day but wasn’t sure if maybe he had some sort of balloon phobia as some people do. Oddly enough, it’s never come up in conversation. I wanted to send him a cheesecake – our joint favourite dessert but they only send huge ones which seemed wasteful as I wasn’t there to help demolish it. I was also going to whisk him away for a weekend and I had either Rhode Island or Atlantic City in mind – 2 extremes – but I was going to let him decide where he wanted to go.

I’m going to treat him to a nice weekend when he arrives here. I hope he comes because he never mentions it unless I bring it up and I don’t want to pressurise him.

Whitsun

The long glorious English weekend stretches ahead and I have absolutely nothing planned and no-one to see, other than a movie tonight and lots and lots of writing. I’m home alone all weekend for the first time since last October when I moved to New York and tasted the apartment share lifestyle as both my room mates are away. I’m going to resist the temptation to run through the apartment naked. I didn’t do it when United won the league last weekend so won’t be doing it now. United winning the league is usually one of the best days of my year, up there with my Birthday – nowadays spent in foreign climes – and Christmas in New York. Strangely the euphoria lasted all of 45 minutes before my lift arrived to take me to an ill decided upon afternoon 50th birthday party in London. As soon as I confirmed the travel details in the morning, I regretted it and as the hour approached, that feeling deepened.  Having got back at 3am and spent a grand total of 8 ½ hours not being able to breathe in the back of a car. I don’t travel at all well as a passenger and had the added misery and a cold kick starting my asthma to contend with. I still got up at 7.30 am the next day to watch the Match of the Day repeat and then wore red until the Champions League Final on the 27th as per tradition. 

Home Alone

I went to see this AwayDays for my Friday movie, a renewed tradition since finding myself back in England. If I was in New York, most likely this would be a night to see one of the girls, not a big night out, usually a movie or drinks or music or just Afternoon Tea at Alice’s Tea Cup followed by a mooch round the shops.

I was a little hesitant as my decision to go was based on it being billed as football*music*fashion*1970s so that I couldn’t resist but then I read about how violent it was and it’s an 18. This was real violence, not Bruce Willis/Stephen Segal pretend fun action packed violence.  (Had to separate those two words so not picked up by search engines for the wrong reason!).  It was good (See review in Movies section) but not as nice a feeling as coming back to an empty flat. I so miss my own place and it’s only half as good as I don’t have any of my furniture or belongings. One day…..

Still I relished every moment and even did some cleaning on Saturday and Sunday mornings after the 15 minutes it took me to find the ‘on’ switch on the vacuum cleaner. Clearly it’s been a long time since I have done any cleaning and I found it quite therapeutic although never will I enjoy picking up or cleaning after anyone else. Back in the days when I worked 18 hour days for year after year I had a housekeeper and had no idea even where the iron was kept. Come to think of it I still haven’t used an iron for several months.

Over this weekend I managed to type up everything I had written since starting again 2 weeks ago, well over 7000 words in all so overall felt quite lifted.

Pride

Well as luck would have it, I walked out into the holiday Saturday lunch time sunshine and straight into Gay Pride, an event I had yet to experience in Birmingham. The idea of ‘doing the galleries’ went out of the window as I tried to search for signs of whether this parade was starting or ending and when and where. An hour later and the purchase of some £14 sweats and £3 shoes ( a result – I have been searching for cheap as chips replacements for things I cannot do without that I have just shipped  in plentiful supply to the US) I eventually figured out and got to the end of the parade although didn’t see any of it. I was appropriately dressed in red, long sleeved, string vest hoodie I thought.  It’s a little hard keeping up with wearing red everyday with 90% of my belongings in New York but so far so good.

Posted in DIARY/Journal | Leave a Comment »

Movie – AwayDays

Posted by rickiej on May 28, 2009

Football. Fashion. Music. 1970s.

What’s not to like?

Initially these 4 words were enough to draw me in but upon reading the story line, I felt the violence was going to be too much for me but there was nothing else on so I was forced to see it.

It was set in Liverpool which meant it could be only based on one of two clubs although I guess in 1979, that could have been any club in the country. It wasn’t quite 70’s so the music was more post punk than Marc Bolan or The Sweet.

The fashion element was purely  about the right anorak and Adidas trainees which I guess I was too young to have any real memory of  and although I do recall the pretty boy, post punk art school look, post punk but pre new romantic which I don’t remember being as particular popular amongst football hooligans. But I wasn’t there.

There is no way this film can be released in America as they would barely understand the Liverpool dialect never mind words like ‘trainees’, ‘ trackies’ and ‘divvy’. I did, mostly owing to my loyalty to early Brookside when the fourth TV channel was introduced in Britain.

The best music in Britain came from Liverpool and I don’t mean the Beatles. Echo and the Bunnymen, Wah! (Pete Wylie), Teardrop Explodes, A Flock of Seagulls, Icicle Works and later The Coral. But the only band to be featured were the Bunnymen and the film makers made a definite decision they weren’t going to play anything from the mainstream and I, a huge music fan circa 1981 onwards, didn’t recognise a single track although could clearly hear Ian McCulloch’s distinct vocals. Every track sounded like Joy Division who did feature along with The Cure and Ultravox (with original lead singer John Foxx), not Liverpool bands but the music easily suited the dark and mysterious vibe of the film.

The violence was all football gang related from the days before security, alcohol bans, smoking bans and fighting bans. It’s hard to believe football was ever like this but actually it was nothing to do with the beautiful game. Just violence for the sake of violence and indeed no football was shown in this film as if to prove that very point. I for one would never have survived a match in those days and I value my life more than my football team. I still wouldn’t go to away matches now, which is what the film portrays, especially after a particularly unpleasant visit to Peterborough a few years ago. Even if it was supposed United fans that caused the aggravation within my block.

The only non-football match violence was remarkably when a gang member knifed his own 30 year- old family man team leader. No one reported him and he attended the victim’s funeral clearly without all his marbles and then went on to inflict more unreported damage. I guess they were all a card short of the full deck particularly the star of the show who dreamt of the day until he could join ‘the pack’.

Thank goodness those days are over and we are just left with the beautiful game.

6½/10

Smile 8/10 for the music                                                                                                               May 22nd 2009

Posted in Movies | Leave a Comment »

Movie – State of Play

Posted by rickiej on May 27, 2009

Like ‘Is There Anybody There?’ I missed this but managed to see it on the last day. A big perk of currently staying within 5 minutes walk of the cinema.

I didn’t know much about the film having not seen the TV series of the same name except that it had a political plot and an all star cast; Russell Crowe, Ben Affleck and Helen Mirren.  All had brilliant characters to play and it was much better than a political drama because it was based in the Washington Post’s news room. Something I’m always interested in as my first career was in publishing.

That made it extra enjoyable although the twists and turns of the story had me hooked until the very end. And I meant the end.

The underlying story was that of a reporter (Crowe) was uncovering a story that could break his old college friend the Congressman (Affleck) whilst under pressure from his typical brash English Editor (Mirren). Add in the fact that the Congressman was having an affair with someone was now dead and the reporter had a crush on his wife. The only thing I found strange was that for some odd reason the distinguished reporter did not disguise himself when meeting with dangerous contacts in dark alleys alone.

A final twist was kind of expected but I was still hooked.

7½/10

Smile Factor 6 ½ mainly for the terrific English editor portrayed by Helen Mirren.

                                                                                      May 19th 2009

Posted in Movies | Leave a Comment »

Movie – Angels And Demons

Posted by rickiej on May 26, 2009

Love Tom Hanks. Love Angels.

So this had to be checked out even though I had no particular interest in the Davinci Code, book or film.

I was told it was faster paced and that was true. The Tom Hanks’ professor character was bought swiftly in and I’m now beginning to recognise the stylish trademarks in Ron Howard’s films. The plot moved swiftly to Rome which was the star of the show. (Sorry Tom) Having been to this great Italian city briefly I immersed myself in every scene although I couldn’t help wincing at the carnage and destruction.

It’s a bit of a mystery thriller but with enough action to keep me completely interested and just when I thought it was all over, there were plenty more thrills and spills to come.  I just love that in a film; value for money.

Of course Tom and the cast were spot on although I wondered why they had an Irish Catholic priest in the shape of Ewan McGregor.

7.5/10 Extra ½ for Rome

Smile factor 8/10

If Will Smith is 4 President, then Tom Hanks is 4 Chief of Staff

Posted in Movies | Leave a Comment »

Diary – Suspect April 17-19th 2009

Posted by rickiej on May 25, 2009

 

I’ve always been nervous of customs and Immigrations, especially in the US and especially after the last several years of being stopped every single time I’ve entered the country through no fault of mine. It turned out I’d left my green visa waiver card in my passport several years ago so when I retuned back, it was still in there so it looked like I’d outstayed my welcome. This was pre-September 11th and the security got much tighter after that. In my case, I had received a letter a couple of years ago to say I would not longer be stopped. I wasn’t.

If I was always nervous, this time I was more so as I didn’t quite believe their weren’t any conditions attached to the 6 month visitor visa I possessed. What I could never have imagined was the nightmare that followed.

The line to passport control was as long as ever, perhaps longer as it was a Friday afternoon. Plus JFK being the busiest and therefore the worst of the New York airports. Similarly I don’t like Heathrow so the journey was already not a favourite but I was overwhelmingly looking forward to going ‘home’ and at least it was my favourite, Virgin Airlines.

For a second, I thought the friendly inspector was going to let me through but sure enough the yellow folder came out, in went my passport and of I was marched into the familiar although not recently visited interview waiting room.

It was 5pm when I first glanced at the clock having sat in the front row, as if that was going to speed up my interview. My shuttle into the city was booked at 5.30 where I was due to unload my suitcases at the storage unit on 107th Street, grab my overnight case, freshen up and then pick up the train into the country from 125th Street. That train journey to the sanctuary of my boyfriend’s home was what I had looked forward to above all else for the last 3 weeks.

A record 3 hours wait later, I was called not to the desk at the front but an interview room at the back. The fact that it took longer than the usual 45 minutes rang nervous alarm bells and the interview room wasn’t helping.

5 minutes after that, my American Dream was shattered. My heart seemed to be made of glass and had been pulled out, shattered into a million pieces and sent into the galaxy never to be seen again. Or sent to hell.

Officer 1 absolutely did not believe I wasn’t seeking or already working illegally in the US. He did not believe my business could successfully be run from a Blackberry, even after I protested I didn’t have a blackberry (it was stolen) and I worked form a laptop. He didn’t believe I just liked being there, making friends and seeing a bit more of his great country.

“No, no, no.” he said, even when I offered to demonstrate how I worked with my laptop there right with me. No, I could stay a month and then will have to return to the UK.

Well it could have been worse I thought at the time. A month gives me time to sort out my shipment of goods arriving from the UK, spend time with my boyfriend whether he liked it or not to see where that was going and see my friends while determining what I needed to do to stay in the US. Apartment hunting was no longer a priority and it was a good job I hadn’t already found one and paid the required 3 months expensive rent up front.

Now past 8pm, I knew my boyfriend would have started to get worried as this was the time he expected me to be there. I eventually asked for a phone call as I had seen other people doing this but by this time everyone knew I was a deportee case and I had to seek further permission for a phone call.

Whilst in the open waiting area, Officer 2 was even more threatening whilst repeating the same questions. He told me there were two options; staying for the month or going straight back on a flight tomorrow. My protesting that I had already been told I will be staying a month fell on deaf ears. “That’s still to be decided”.

So now my world really had crumbled. I couldn’t care less that I was hungry, tired and needed the bathroom. Or about the extremely irritating and rude children running around and kicking me as they passed. Just that my dream was shattering and there’s nothing I could do to stop it.

I was struck by how many Americans were waiting although I realised most of these were released pretty quickly. Then I noticed how many pilots were in the room but again, they jumped the queue too. I reckoned my status was just about the terrorist suspects. Only just above though.

I was called back to see Officer 3 who was by far the nicest but this was when I my world was smashed beyond recognition. I was going back tomorrow. For a second, my gorgeously simple New York life flashed before me. The working in the morning followed by relaxing bubble bath and lunch before writing in the coffee shop in the afternoon or attending writing class. The Saturday mornings spent watching 2 or 3 live football matches. The weeks spent in the fantastic city and of course my beautiful country weekends with the boyfriend where I felt surprisingly at home. It was the idyllic American life. My longed for American Dream. Gone.

The life flashing lasted just for a few seconds. I quickly realised that I could wait another 5 or 6 months for that to resume. After all I’d waited 41 years.

What I couldn’t wait for, what I longer for was to see my boyfriend. What I wouldn’t have given to spend 1 month with him. I week. 1 night. Eating, talking, walking and waking up together. If I was being honest, I needed to know if this surprising, bolt-of-the-blue feeling went both ways.

I was booked on the flight the next evening at 6.30.Earlier I heard Officer 2 enquiring about availability of a Virgin rep. I just didn’t know he was saving me a seat.

Officer 3 gave me the full official, documented interview that will go on my record. I was given the option to voluntarily remove myself from the US which meant I wouldn’t receive an automatic 5 year ban. At least that’s the way I understood it and it was said on no uncertain terms that was my best option. Also that I was lucky as most people would just get an automatic ban. It was because I had not done anything wrong that I was given this option. I just didn’t look good on paper and they were suspicious. That’s all they needed to throw me off their land and there was I thinking our two nations had a good relationship.

I can’t remember the exact name but Officer 3’s name had ‘angel’ in it which seemed to give him a markedly better and positive attitude than the others. As my legitimate visa was being revoked, I could technically go back and obtain a visa on Monday and fly back out on Tuesday. Of course we know that it was not going to be that simple as these things tend to take their own sweet time.

 

The Phone Call

Finally, at the end of the interview I was asked who I wanted to call. I had realised a couple of hours back that I should have said ‘with friend’ when I was asked where I was staying. The word ‘boyfriend’ seemed to ring huge alarm bells. That said ‘wants to stay indefinitely’, ‘needs to find work’ and/or ‘illegal alien’ all over it. Perhaps then I would have been allowed to at least stay the month. Now however, I blatantly asked to call my boyfriend.

So they dialled the number for me and the first thing he did was offer help. ‘That’, I said ‘Is the problem’, before explaining why they are suspicious of me even though I haven’t done anything wrong. He helped defuse the situation for a few sweet minutes with his humour, after telling me he had tried contacting my friends via Facebook when he got worried and then offered to contact people for me. I had used up my one phone call but I didn’t want to speak to anyone else, just him for as long as I could until sure enough I was told to wind up the call. I told him they were taking me to an overnight place in Brooklyn where I can sleep, eat and have access to a phone. He asked if he was able to see me. I doubted it but it was a lovely thought. So close and yet so far.

It was gone 10.30 pm when Angel bought me some revolting pasta prison food. I needed to eat and picked out 6-7 pasta shells that I could bare to stomach to keep me going and pocketed the packet of crackers for a later emergency. I was past caring and I mused if my stomach had shrunk from being starved for so long. I was thankful that I had kept a water bottle and regularly filled it from the water fountain.

Angel told me it would be inhumane to make me stay in the waiting room all day and stated my lift should be on its way to take me to my Brooklyn bed, food and phone access.

At 11.20pm, more than 5 hours after my arrival and after all my paperwork was completed along with my finger prints being taken for the third time, Angel stated my lift should be on its way in 10 minutes. I was absolutely exhausted and wanted to sleep. I’ve now been up nearly 24 hours and not had a decent meal since my breakfast in London.

Day 2 – Inhumane

7am next morning. No sign of our lift or our Officers or the promised bed, food, phone. By now, I was on nodding terms with a gentleman in a similar position who was being deported back to India although he had his cases with him and mine were detained by Virgin, I guess as they were giving me a ride back. I was allowed to speak to a very nice man from Virgin the night before who rifled through my baggage to bring me my toiletries case. They thought I had my Asthma inhaler in there but I had been sensible and kept that with me.

I had seen 3 shift changes throughout the night whilst trying to sleep across 2 seats with a bar in the middle. Luckily I had my long leather coat which meant I was shaking less than I would have been but still shaking none the less. I did need to look after my laptop and several valuables so I had to try and sleep whilst holding on to everything.

The loud staff joviality throughout the otherwise quiet night ensured I was woken at less than hourly intervals. It was strangely comforting that they were demonstrably happy. Perhaps it proved they were humans after all.

The water had resulted in my asking to be taken to the bathroom every couple of hours which also got me out of that room that was filled with agitated, tired and scared people. It can’t be much better than waiting for your day in court knowing your life is in the hands of a jury. The only blessing was that we were either going to get through or be sent home.

With each accompanied bathroom visit I wondered where they thought I was going to run. Especially with 4” heels that I had not removed all night.

I came too when I heard a nice lady officer come in to check when we had last eaten and to let us both know they knew we were still here. I had asked on each bathroom visit if they had forgotten us and indeed any other questions I could think of but none resulted in any action. Lady Officer said she would organise some breakfast and then the lift will come.

I didn’t see the point of going anywhere now as I was going to be back for my return flight in a few hours. I’d have much rather just gone back to the departure lounge and checked in early and got some sleep there.

Finally our lift arrived in the shape of 3 security personnel at the exact same time as our yet to be warmed up breakfast. My fellow deportee had been told that he will be hand cuffed before being taken out of the airport. That would be a step too far I thought and felt a call to the British Embassy coming. Where do they we are going to run too? We were both professional citizens with, I believe, respectable lives.

We had to take our uncooked breakfast ‘to go’ and whilst the deportee got quite unnecessarily chained up for ‘his own safety as well as the officers’, I thankfully was not. What a relief. It would not have gone with my outfit I’m sure.

It was great to get out into the sunny New York April morning for just a few minutes before being directed into separate quarters of a van. Just like in the TV cop shows with wire partion. I fell in and out of sleep and wondered why it was taking an hour to get to neighbouring Brooklyn.

Finally we arrived. It was a detention centre in New Jersey. I had imagined something like a children’s home. Maybe a dorm room with carpet, curtains and a free phone from which I could speak to my boyfriend all through the night. What kind of bed was I going to get here? It was around 10am when we arrived into what looked like a police station reception where I was allowed to make my second phone call. I jumped at the chance to call the boyfriend and explain whilst promising I’ll call as soon as I can at the airport. It was lovely to hear his voice once again even though I guess we were both distressed over the situation.

I had been promised that I would be at the airport 4 hours before departure which meant leaving in 4 hours so I’d guessed no sleep.

 I was beginning to wonder if anything Angel said was true.

 

Usual Suspects

It dawned on me, given the limited time that this was no safe house. I was here to be processed. Rush processed at that. More forms. More questions. More finger prints. More inedible food and more lack of sleep.

This time I was in my very own room with a lock. I was in a TV cop show cell complete with the de rigueur steel toilet, tiny sink and a mirror but the key was on the opposite side.

I could not eat the breakfast that came into the cell with me whereas my laptop, toiletries and bag full of valuables was left on the other side. 2 parts of it was fruit that I don’t like but I eventually had the 2 small dry pancakes to keep me going. A long way from the brunch I should have been having as a free UK Citizen this morning. I or the staff had no idea how the self heating box worked as their were no instructions. After more questions, I was getting a shower although I was not the least bit bothered about receiving one. A change of clothes however would have been welcome but they were with the airline.

The shower room was open plan and just off the corridor. I was asked to strip so my clothes could be taken away to be replaced by prison type uniform, complete with hugely oversized underwear and the world’s smallest toiletries. Tooth brush, shower gel, shampoo, body lotion and deodorant called ‘Maximum Protection’ which amused me somewhat. I was left alone to shower and get dressed. I didn’t look for cameras but no doubt they were there.

I had no idea why I was here and I don’t think the staff knew why I had to go through the procedures as I had such a short time in which to leave for my flight. Why didn’t they just leave me at the airport this morning?

Afterwards, I was ready for more questions, the obligatory finger prints – as if they may have changed in the last 12 hours – and a ‘usual suspects’ style photo. I was interviewed, or rather processed as she didn’t ask me anything too challenging, by a young lady with unattractive, long, fancy talons who spent the whole time barking into the phone protesting at some work she was being asked to do.

I was told to tuck my oversized t-shirt into my oversized trousers and put my over sized sleeveless over-shirt on before being taken for my medical. I was never good at conforming to uniforms, not even at school. The place had to be locked down in order for me to be walked through the cold corridors to the medical centre. On enquiring why, I leant that it was so male dominated that they rarely had women there so it was to ensure my safety. I heard doors and gates being locked at every turn. There was a short wait in yet another locked room before I saw the nurse who would decide if I was fit to travel. I perked up no end on hearing that. My blood pressure being low was the only issue but luckily she decided that was only because I hadn’t eaten and immediately made a phone call to rush through my lunch.

Back in my cell, my lunch duly followed. All of it cold, more fruit and what I identified as breaded chicken of which one bite made my heave. I later had a few spoons of dry, cold rice to keep me going.

I was going to catch a plane in a few hours and I’ll be gone to a place with good food.

I had grown optimistic that we were moving through the red tape quickly when I had the longest wait. This was the most anxious I had been in my cell and it was when I started pacing up and down that  I started wondering how Nelson Mandela would have felt for 25 years. 25 years! I tried to measure the length of the cell using my feet as guide as I could barely sit down let alone nap. That made me feel worse as obviously there is absolutely no comparison. Except he hadn’t done anything wrong either.

I started feeling claustrophobic for the first time but resisted taking the inhaler and I had no idea of the time. I looked out of the door window to see my belongings all sitting in the office and not securely put away. My money, phones and jewellery were just sitting on the desk including the Tiffany cross I removed from my neck as soon as I came back to the UK and never put on again.

Every time I heard footsteps I was desperate for them to come to unlock my door and give me my clothes back. I had stopped praying so wishing and determination was all I had. The foot steps went passed 4-5 times before they finally unlocked my door. I was given my clothes back in the canvass sack I had placed them in earlier.

I got dressed in seconds not caring who walked past my small window to catch me in a state of undress.

Then I waited. More footsteps.

And waited.

The Long Journey Back

Finally, I was let out of the cell, back into the office to await the completion of my paperwork before I would be taken to the airport. I was given back my 4 pieces of jewellery which I counted loudly into the bag held open for me earlier. Only 3 pieces came back and I was missing a gold, cross ear-ring. Luckily it had just dropped onto the floor.

Here I realised there was another lady who was going back too. She was from Slovakia and spoke good enough English to converse with. The staff were pretty jovial which helped our mood. We were lucky; we were on our way to safety.

The officers were fighting over who was to drive and which vehicle as one was rumoured to be without fuel. Once in the van, I asked them to check again which flight I was on and they convinced me it was 18.30 and not 16.30 as I had heard both in the last 18 hours.

In the event, as they were running late to get the Slovakian on her plane, one lady swapped with the male driver on the assumption she was going to drive a lot faster. They only had an hour or so to get her on her plane.

On a dazzling sunny day that should have been the first of many spent in New York arrived back at JFK airport a few hours after I had left it.

Two officers got out check-in Mrs Slovakia leaving her waiting anxiously in the van for an elongated time. They finally got back and waited whilst the younger officer went off for some sort of break. She returned with a big hot meal which she ate after Mrs Slovakia left having given me her address for some bizarre reason, which I duly through away. I didn’t what she had done and didn’t need to be associated. Young Officer then kept me company whilst enjoying her hot meal followed by a nap in the New York sunshine. Sounds idyllic. I had $700 burning a whole in my pocket without anything to eat.

I waited. And waited for what seemed like another age. In the heat, starving with just my bottle of water for nourishment.

An hour or so in the van and finally the officers returned to check me in but not before more in-team arguing ensued. Can’t they just leave me in the airport and let me get on with it?

For the second time I informed them that my toiletries needed to be checked in as I’m not allowed onboard with it. To which they retorted that I can’t take them on board. I know. That’s what I was telling them!

They went to check me in, leaving me waiting again.

Ever since I had the displeasure of their company, the younger officer showed great disdain for her older colleague and this carried on no doubt long after their journey with me ended.

This is where Virgin Airlines came into their own once again,

Upon taking me into the airport, my young guard jumped the check-in line to ask about checking in my toiletries case with the luggage. The member of the Virgin staff directed us to the supervisor. Whilst waiting behind one person there, another supervisor offered help. Within seconds, with a beaming, friendly smile she had summoned a box which duly arrived for me to put my toiletry bag and anything else I wanted into. Immediately it was sealed, checked in and I had a receipt for it and was on my way.

My two guards escorted me towards the gate until I asked them to stop as soon as my eyes fell upon a café. They granted my wish to stop and obtain something to eat. I desperately needed a hot drink but my now my stomach was way too delicate for that. I needed fresh orange juice and something dry so I chose hummus with chips and spend $7 of my $700. The best $7 I could have spent but completely frowned upon by my young guard who couldn’t believe what it cost. I told her it’s a lot cheaper than London and secondly, what choice do I have?

I held back on my real thoughts. “You haven’t fed me properly in 24 hours, ate a hot meal and had a cold drink in front of me whilst I waited over an hour in a hot van, starving, thirsty and tired and didn’t excuse yourself or offer me anything! This is real food of my choosing. It’s the best $7 I have ever spent!”

Food. Sleep. Phone

As we reached the sun-lit and warm departure lounge I saw my plane outside. We sat with all the other passengers and I attempted to try a few chips with hummus before quickly realising I couldn’t manage anymore.

I was grateful that they were positive at my request to switch my phone on and check for messages. I listened to several messages from my boyfriend and from Crazy Too and read a few texts before sneakily texting my boyfriend to let him know where I was and that I will call him the minute I was free.

I had a little light banter with both my guards and the British family sitting opposite who I was sure were wondering what I had done wrong to be with 2 escorts and why I was fairly socially jovial. They should have seen me anytime in the last 24 hours if they wanted the response they expected from a ‘suspect’.

Of course I hadn’t broken any law and maybe the Virgin Airline staff knew this as they treated me with extra TLC to ensure my safe and healthy journey back.

I was allowed on the plane first but as I got to the door with my escorts, I was stopped by staff who wanted to make sure they had the right luggage for me remembering I hadn’t seen it since I left London.

They asked me to look out of the door and sure enough my 3 bags were there all on their own waiting for my approval. I mentioned the box that had been checked in afterwards although I was confident that they were efficient enough to get that on the plane. They insisted I waited until they checked. Quite frankly I wanted to get on the plane and be free to make a phone call. Only then was I allowed on and my guards left having handed over my passports and paperwork to Virgin staff.

Maybe not for normal circumstances but I had the best seat in the house; the last seat at the back, on the middle aisle near the bathrooms and stewards. This meant I could fall asleep without too many people going passed me through the night flight. For the mum and the teenage boy sitting next to me it was not so good but after I explained to them why it was good for me, they had every sympathy.

First things first, I had my first long, private conversation with my boyfriend and to my surprise and delight he mentioned he would come and see me in England. That just about had me doing imaginary somersaults before I said my goodbyes ahead of the staff telling me to do so. I had had enough of being told what to do and when to do it to last me a lifetime. I just had a glass of cold water and didn’t wait for the hot drink before falling gently asleep.

I only awoke when feeling slightly queasy and although my stomach was empty, I needed to make my way to the back to find more water and then the bathroom. By the time I surfaced again there was a flurry of TLC and one of the stewards had got me large bottle of water ready from which I poured some into my own empty orange juice bottle.

I fell asleep until we descended and as I was not in a rush to go anywhere could have done with another 2-3 hours sleep although my fellow passengers disagreed with me.

We made a lose plan to meet on the other side as they had time to kill but it turned out I had to wait until everyone was off so a staff member was free to escort me through passport control. That was a little frustrating but at least I was not on a deadline. So I never got to meet the nice mum and son but my luggage was waiting for me already.

I grabbed a trolley and my first hot drink since leaving here 2 days ago and made my way to the bus station. No mean feat with a very heavy trolley and going downhill all the way. I called my best friend whilst waiting for the lift and without much explanation, told her I need to stay with her. I had no idea but assumed a coach went to Birmingham and sure enough, a staff member offered help and having spilt a whole large drink after just 3 sips, I had 8 minutes to rush and get my bus whilst mouthing apologies to all around me.

As I drifted off to sleep on board, I was relieved and looking forward to good food and a good nights’ sleep surrounded by good friends. Tomorrow I will begin piecing my life back together.

I awoke as we drove through Birmingham airport to the sound of Michael Buble’s ‘Home’ through my headset. This was the soundtrack to the last 3 weeks as I longed to go home to New York. The track that I had sent to all my friends and boyfriend to express how I was feeling the day before I flew out.

Instead I’m back in cold harsh gloomy England.

No clothes. No car. No furniture. No belongings and No Blackberry. Just my friends.

And Marks and Spencer.

Posted in DIARY/Journal, Ramblings | Leave a Comment »

Movie – Is There Anybody There?

Posted by rickiej on May 24, 2009

The newest Michael Caine has the now fairly tried and tested story or an older gentleman befriending a youngster. With Caine it could have gone one of two ways; the perfect English gent who liked his sheets just so or the miserable old git. Choosing the latter perhaps meant easier laughs although I was quite taken aback at how old he looks. He probably played a character similar to his own age but was that his real face or make-up?

Based in a fledgling old people’s home , as they would have been called in the mid 1980’s, that the parents of the aforementioned youngster run with a great deal of emotional and financial stress. When the newly widowed Caine character arrives in his old Campervan, he had to be convinced to stay with the assortment of characters that you would expect within the eccentric English elderly.  The sort of people that could tell a story or two from their long lifetimes  as pointed out by the young mother in trying to tell her young son how privileged he was by living with them. And they do make you laugh in the process.

His surroundings could only enhance his fascination with death and all things morbid. His hunting of ghosts and signs of life after death dumfounded our elderly gent resident who set about trying to give him a more positive outlook on life leading to the inevitable bond.

All the mini stories were a cross between a soap and a British kitchen sink drama. The old guy was a magician in his glory days and accidently chopped a finger off whilst performing for the residents as a birthday surprise for the young boy. The father (David Morissey) had a wondering eye and was generally a big girls’ blouse whilst the mother (Anne-Marie Duff, Shameless)  did her very best to keep marriage, family and business together enduring many obstacles.

It turned out to be quite a delightful English film that moved along nicely.

Sir Michael Caine has reportedly been bemoaning the lack of parts for older actors lately but judging by the refreshing familiar mature faces in the home, they all had a part here.

7/10

Smile factor 8/10                                                                                                             May 12th 2009

Posted in Movies | Leave a Comment »

 
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.