I
thought it impossible to meet someone who is even more delighted than
I to live in Brugge, but I
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Illustration is a cliché BUT the message hits the spot! |
now know someone. A young Portuguese man
who has worked here for a few months and is exuberantly grateful with his new life though his wife and two small
children still live in Portugal; she is a university librarian but
Daniel is working hard to persuade her to consider living and working
here, if that is possible. The difficulty, of course, is for her to
find a comparable job while she is learning Dutch. We breakfasted
recently together and I was particularly struck by the fact that in
Flanders, he earns 2000 euros a week but in Portugal, even though
with a degree, five hundred was the best he could find. He, himself, is thrilled with the upturn in his fortunes but is especially
enchanted that his line manager has told him recently that the firm
wants to invest in him because he has potential. His face shone as he
confided that no one had ever told him anything like that before and
he is 40. The whole ethos in Portugal is different, he says; only a
select few are valued and ‘
ordinary people’ are considered
expendable. In the meantime, he loves his job; is learning Dutch,
with lessons paid for by his employer; he rents a flat, found for him
by his employer; spends money in the local area on food, drink and
some entertainment. Shortly, his little family will come to stay for
three weeks, with activities planned by Daniel to the last degree,
many of which will incur expenditure no doubt. I am a supporter of
the European Union but it remains opaque as to why the more
successful Western European nations cannot pass on to the poorer
members, the message that good employment practice pays dividends.
There is SO much the EU could do to improve its modus operandi but
even so, the UK seems determined, unwisely, [for 'unwisely' read 'self-destructively'] to Brexit when it could
have been a force for good within the citadel. But I must resist an
anti-Brexit rant because it is so boringly predictable.
I
have a group of Bruggelingen which meets for coffee, tea, beer and
wine with English conversation, once a week. They have become a dear
group of friends and they/we are amazingly congenial when one
considers the random nature of how people became members. There are
no rules; attendance is on a ‘
when one can make it’ basis;
there is no teaching so any learning is purely accidental or at best,
occasional; one can leave whenever, so the leaving arc is roughly
between 7.30 and 10.00 o’clock. However, I am considering a little
lesson on the double negative [suggested by a member, possibly tongue
in cheek] so that the relevance of Trump’s Putin remarks and
pathetic, post-event, forced ridiculous ‘correction’, can be
properly s

avoured. I would like to indulge here in a frenetic,
anti-Trump, disbelieving, mystified rant about this vain, mendacious,
lying, amoral carpetbagger temporarily using the White House as an El
Dorado for himself and his family while he trashes American
democracy, but I won’t because the New York Times does it so much
better. Brugge is where I discovered the delights of the political
reporting of the NYT and it entertains and challenges me every week.
Yet another Brugge Plus. As I have possibly mentioned before, Brugge
does seem to be the perfect place in which to site my ascent of the
higher slopes of Later Life.

Oh
dear. I see that the above two paragraphs both include an admonition to
avoid ranting. I SO don’t want to become A Grumpy Old Woman. Surely
this is a recent personal phenomenon, the rant, [not the avoidance of
same]? Is it old age or is it the complete inability to understand
majorities in two nations voting to shoot themselves in the foot so
comprehensively which is the cause? Is it the mayhem in the U.S. and
the threatened meltdown of trade and inter-continental movement
including ease of holiday travel for the Brits, causing my inner
bewilderment and anger OR is it merely age-resistance to change? I
won’t discuss!!
But
a closing mention of a traditional delight of the elderly; my terrace is a particular joy. It is floral and fertile; decorative and divine; private yet
offering a sweeping architectural view to die for. It is ideal for me
because I am the sole seigneur with all that solo power of
decision-making yet with the scope to share it with others who may
only admire. Patio Nirvana!
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A corner of my terrace a year ago! I cannot work out how to
transfer photos from my new iPhone.
Hate new technology!
Putative rant stifled.
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