Archive for July, 2008

A Whiff of Salsa – Once Again – in Dublin

July 26, 2008

Having had my brief encounter with salsa in Cyprus recently, despite all efforts to avoid it, I suddenly remembered a visit to Dublin a few years ago with some non-salsa friends.

And they certainly DID NOT want to do salsa, and although I’d packed my dance shoes in the hope that my whingeing would persuade them to accompany me to a salsa club, they were having none of it.  But if found me, it did, albeit fleetingly.  It sort of waved at me and whispered in my ear – i’m still here, and here’s a teeny tiny bit of me just to keep you topped up…….

Now, it sort of happened like this.  IIt was One of those nights, the last hour of which you just couldn’t make up; the sort of hour, which if you told people about it, they would think you were lying, and you would have to bring out witnesses to corroborate it. And I have got witnesses, because they were in it….

The evening started off with all five of us.  We have known eachother since 19…ahem, and although we don’t see eachother very often these days, all have our assigned roles within the group: the highly organised career woman, who will buy 3 designer outfits before the rest of us have rolled out of bed, the very organised earth mother, who always has a supply of milk cartons and tea bags somewhere in her luggage, the one with no sense of direction who we always lose, the one is slightly older and has had a very interesting life…., and me – the one who is always late.

When its all five of us together at the same time, we balance eachother out; but lose the first two, and well, it can all go a bit to pot really. And it did….but we had more fun!

After a lovely meal and a couple of exploratory visits to a selection of Dublin pubs, the organised section of the group decided they were tired, and headed off to the hotel. This left the scatty section – which included me – to visit one more pub. Then we decided we too should return to said hotel.  But, um, where was the hotel…..

We set off hopefully, positive that something would jog our collective memories.  But we’d spent the evening visiting Dublin pubs, so, really, fat chance there.  Still, it was a very warm summer’s evening, and Dublin is very nice, so we carried on regardless.

Suddenly, the one who always gets lost – who is used asking for directions, obviously – grabbed a nice young man as he was walking past and asked him the whereabouts of our hotel…….and being a nice young man, possibly overwhelmed by our Welsh charm (all three of us are Welsh and will talk anyone into submission), he offered to walk us there.

And of course, he told us his life story.  By now, it is around midnight, and we have no idea where we are or where we are going, but he is such a nice young man, we didn’t really care.  Then, he told us he worked in advertising and was currently working on a campaign for fizzy drinks….and there is my office he said.  There are Cornettos in the freezer and said fizzy drinks in the fridge, would you like me to get you some, it’s such a nice evening…..

And we all went, Yes, please, free ice-cream and fizzy drinks. And its past midnight, get us!!!! (well, we didnt say that, but that was the gist of it)

So, he trotted over the road.  And we waited.  And we waited.  And we waited…..And we waited. And then it began to dawn on us that he may not come back.  That it may have been an elaborate way of getting rid of us.  I mean, we can’t half talk, the three of us.  He could have gone in the front door and nipped out a side door, and the one who’d had an interesting life needed the loo, and my feet were hurting…

And miraculously he reappeared, clutching four cornettos and four cans of fizzy drinks.  What a nice young man! The four of us continued on our way – he was from New Zealand, apparently, over for less than a year, liked Dublin, thinking of Hong Kong next – and then we were there, far too quickly, back at the hotel.  And he turned left, and we turned right, and we all waved, and thought, you can’t beat eating Cornettos at Midnight in Dublin in the company of a lovely young man from New Zealand.

With the best part of the evening apparently over, we climbed the steps to the hotel, still clutching our cans of Fanta, or Seven Up, or whatever he’d given us.  As we walked through the door, the Night Porter said, do you want to go on somewhere else………..?

Myself and the one with no sense of direction said, yes, why not….the one who had had an interesting life, said, no, too tired, need the loo….

So he pressed the buttons for both lifts, sent the tired one up towards her room, and pressed the button sending myself and the one with no sense of direction downwards – to who knows not.  We never asked….

As the lift doors opened in the basement, I heard something….a vaguely familiar tune, with latin rhythms, vibrant and catchy, and i said, salsa, salsa, i can hear salsa….so we turned the corner – still clutching our fizzy drinks – and stepped through a fire escape into a bar heaving with people, as a band played the last few notes of the last salsa tune of the evening (as it turned out).

We stood in the doorway, me waiting for the next track, so i could strut my salsa stuff, but the band started packing up.  This was much to the relief of my friend, I feel – she’d had a bad experience at a salsa club in Cardiff a few years previously, and as a result had a few prejudices. 

So, we walked to the bar, put our cans on the counter, turned to survey the heaving and happy crowds…and when we turned back to pick up our drinks, the barman had poured them into glasses for us and thrown the cans away….

By now, past words, we just looked at eachother, finished our drinks, picked our way back through the fire escape and took the lift to our rooms.

And in the morning made sure we spoke to eachother about it, so we knew it wasn’t just a dream…you know, like the Bobby Ewing dream….

so, there you are – I got a whiff of salsa, despite everything, and a free cornetto to boot….

Copyright Chris Penhall 2008

www.chrispenhall.co.uk

How I sort of – but not really – salsa danced in Cyprus despite trying to avoid all things salsa.

July 4, 2008

There is a hotel in Cyprus that I visit regularly – The Azia Resort and Spa – in Paphos, where I go and just “be” for a while.  Where the most important and difficult decisions of the day are a. which way shall i point the sunbed – the pool or the sea? b.  where shall we eat?  That’s it.

And it’s where i allow myself to bathe in the light and the colour of the sea and the palm trees, immerse myself in the the pinks and whites and yellows of the bouganvaellia, and gaze at the slow sunsets when the sky turns from pink, to purple to clear, starlit black.

It’s where I walk around in bare feet all day just so i can feel the warmth of the grass and the heat of the paths, where I run through sprinklers in the evenings when I am wearing clothes – not a swimming costume – just because it feels nice and i know i will dry quite soon anyway.  Where every day is a Bad Hair Day, because of the heat, but who cares.  And where I jump in the pool clumsily and noisilyfor no reason other than it feels nice and it embarrasses my children. (getting in and out of the hammock is also good for this, too, as I have to roll onto the floor to disembark)

Sometimes we venture out of this little piece of heaven into the bright lights of Paphos. 

I had no desire to dance salsa, speak salsa or feel salsa.  i wanted to escape from everything and be someone else for a while.   One evening, it didn’t quite work like that…….

My children and i sat down at a restaurant prepared to eat slowly and watch the world amble by.

I looked up at an adjascent wall and saw something that wasn’t there last year. A big orange sign.  it said Salsa Classes every Thursday – salsa, merengue, bachata, cha cha, regaetton.

I sighed.  Of all the chairs at all the tables in all the restuarants in Paphos, i had to pick the chair that faced the sign advertising the thing I was trying to escape.  Really, this year I was definately trying to escape.

But, I thought, this is Tuesday, not Thursday, and there will be no music to set my feet tapping or my bottom wiggling and make me ache to dance.

But, then it began to happen.  You know I was trying to escape and be someone else.  Well, nope, not tonight.

The manager of the restaurant decided to share his encycloapedic knowledge of the geograpy of the UK with us.  And very, very impressive it was.

“Where are you from?” he asked.

I told him. Then listened open mouthed as he mentioned two night clubs in the town, a few roads, the main trunk roads and quite a few towns round and about.  We gave him a well deserved round of applause.

A short while later a man from Manchester paused to look at the menu.

“Where are you from?” asked the manager.

“Manchester,” said the man, who then listened open mouthed as he told him the main routes in and out of Machester, plus some towns round and about

Another round of applause

As we were leaving, the manager was talking to a couple, and called us over.

“Where are you from?” he asked the lady.

She told him – a town near to us.

“Listen to this,” I said, “This is impressive.”

Then he told her about her town, where it was near, and what roads you could take to get there.

Another round of applause.

And then it happened……a couple of high fives, and then, “Let’s dance!”he said, so there I was, a 30 second dance on the harbour in Paphos, next to a sign that said, Salsa every Thursday – salsa, merengue, bachata, cha cha, regaetton.

And as I ran after my children (who had disappeared into the crowds, embarrassed, as usual), I thought….how did that happen? And how come of all the people in all the restaurants in all of Paphos it happened to the one that salsa dances – the one that wanted to escape from salsa, for a while at least….

And the reason is, that every time something happens that makes me want to walk away from salsa, it wont let me go.  It waves at me and goes “I’m in your blood whether you like it or not.  You aint going nowhere else, are you, really.  Enjoy the sunsets, and see you next week……..

Wonder what the salsa classes are like in Paphos, then…?

 

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