Hey Mom,
I meant for my occasional Sri Lanka blog to be a bit more occasional than it has been. Forgive me. I was derailed first by work, then by sickness (coincidence?), then our friend Andrea (a.k.a. ‘the dainty’) came to visit. Thankfully, I’m no longer working, no longer sick, and ‘the dainty’ finally left, so I can return to the business of sharing Sri Lanka with you. Because there’s much to cover, and I am, by nature, an intolerable drone, I’ll break it up and limit myself to one paragraph per subject (if, at times, longish). I’ll begin with the panoramic business of what’s happening in Sri Lanka (i.e. the war’s over), then on to the slightly less exciting developments in your son’s life (no work! heavy drinking!), and finally zooming in for one intriguing detail on the ground.
I. The President’s Mustache Wins the War
No doubt you’ve heard the civil war that’s plagued Sri Lanka for 26 years has ended. For three days straight, after it was declared over, the streets were awash (still are) in national flags, people chanting, marching, and dancing, lighting firecrackers and other larger detonations (apparently nothing says ‘the war’s over!’ like the replication of warfare). That, you’ve probably seen on t.v. What you haven’t heard, perhaps, is the story of just how the war was won. It’s largely attributed to the president, almost single-handedly. After all, many have tried before, but he did it. Despite pressure from the international community, he didn’t cease operations against the LTTE, and in the end, he prevailed. For this he is celebrated EVERYWHERE. On the backs of tuk-tuks, the sides of buses, walls and windows throughout the city. You see his image, and you can’t help but wonder where a man finds the fortitude necessary to do such things as he has, but slowly, you realize, as with most things: we look and look, before we see it’s right under our noses. His is a prominent mustache. There’s one intersection in Colombo with a thirty-foot likeness of him, propped up with an impossibly complex network of poles and scaffolding, and his mustache has the wingspan of a condor. Seeing it there, soaring in the air above, you can almost imagine it crushing the LTTE with one arm, and with the other, screening the IDP camps in the north for the final Tigers, while simultaneously delivering a conciliatory speech to the Tamil community at large (and in Tamil no less!). You wouldn’t put such feats past it, past him. As far as the Sri Lankans I’ve talked to are concerned, he’s a hero capable of anything, and when you pass his image again and again, witness that Herculean flex above his smile, you can’t help but believe it too.
II. The New Warden Arrives; Abruptly Departs
When last we spoke, I left off with the disappointing news that I may be working. Now, this is a complex and very detailed story, one I can’t do justice to in the confines of this regimented post, so I’ll collapse the whole thing—interview, hire, work, release—into a paragraph (as promised). When I get home, I’ll tell you the whole story. Just for context, remember that I had no idea there was even the potential for me to work here, was in fact planning/praying for the opposite, and it was under these expectations that I suddenly, dreadfully, found myself interviewing at St. Thomas College.
I arrived that first day at St. Thomas to meet Mr. M. (we’ll call him for anonymity). Imagine a cross between Homer Simpson and Apu (the Indian character who runs the Quickie Mart), and you’ve got an accurate likeness. On his desk: piles of papers and folders, a snow globe, a denim box that held his pens, the word ‘unique’ embroidered on it. “Yes Judd,” he began, “very impressive C.V. Very impressive. What we are wanting to know is what you’d like to do with it? Shall you come in five days a week?” At that moment, I panicked, tried to think of how I might exit gracefully—remembered, with some shame, a time I got out of a prospective job by saying I had to be admitted to the hospital for internal tests—but that didn’t seem like the right approach. “I can see that is too much. It’s okay Judd, it’s okay. You tell me. What is it you want to do?” I noticed a man standing at Mr. M’s door. Enter Mr. V.: playwright, director, and head of literature for the Upper School. He sat down, and I noticed he too held a copy of my C.V. Flanked on all sides. Mr. M. filled him in on where we were, very politely explaining that I had no idea what I was doing, what I wanted to do. “It’s okay,” Mr. V. said. “You tell us what you want to do. We’ll make it work.” The further we went, the more we talked, the clearer something was becoming: when they said, “you tell us, we’ll make it work,” they meant it. I slowly realized, despite all the trappings of being one of the most prestigious schools in the land (which it undoubtedly is), it held the same orbit as the rest of the Sri Lanka I’d encountered, an orbit that could best be described as: whatever (“There’s a giant felled tree here, sir, where we’re building this security wall. Should we chop it up and get it out of the way?” “Nah, why bother with all that? Just build around it.”). After all, here they were asking me: “Do you want to work?” And I was responding, “no,” again and again. “Great,” they said. “You tell us how little you want to work, and we’ll make it happen for you.” What had begun horrifyingly, was quickly turning out to be the greatest interview in the history of the world. Eventually, we hashed out a schedule for me to come in two days a week, beginning the following Monday. Mr. V. walked me around campus, took me into several classrooms, and introduced me as the new warden (think principal), as a joke. Those poor kids. They looked both horrified and disappointed. You could just see their faces working: “Him?” All in all, it was a very promising introduction. Monday comes. I hold two English conversation classes, where students ask me many questions: Sir, why are you sweating so much? Sir, can you tell me about Area 51? Sir, are there many beautiful women in America? Sir, who’s your favorite WWE wrestler? Tuesday. It becomes clear I’m there to do anything that needs doing, when I’m asked to cover a physics class for three straight periods. Me! A physics class! If you asked me, I couldn’t tell you what physics even is (gravity?). In physics, I’m asked more questions: Sir, why are you sweating so much? Sir, does this look like the right answer? (response, an old teacher trick: “why don’t you tell me if it’s the right answer.”) In short, a crazy, chaotic, wonderful job that ended that same afternoon. Mr. M.: “Yes Judd, I’m afraid we are having a problem.” I prepared to tell him it wasn’t my fault; I had no business being in a physics class in the first place. “Our budget. This economy. Parents can’t pay their fees. We are, as they say, in the red. I’m afraid we’re only going to be able to offer you 4,000 rupees a month ($33), and that won’t cover your transportation. I wish there was more we could do.” Our agreement: I work very little, pro bono, and they’d ferry me to and fro. Without transportation covered, I’d be paying to work, and that’s a serious violation of principle. I thanked him for the opportunity, and—though St. Thomas College would, undoubtedly, have provided me a great deal of material—wasn’t altogether heartbroken I could again count myself amongst the unemployed.
III. Horsedicking Around or What Unemployment Looks Like in Sri Lanka
I have always been an intensely lazy person, and someone for whom the carrot of job = money was never much of a dangle (remember the e.e. cummings lines I tacked up on my bedroom door: “my specialty is living said / a man (who could not earn his bread / because he would not sell his head)”). I’m not sure how I turned out this way. My whole life I’ve been surrounded by hard workers, I work with hard workers, was raised by hard workers, am descended from hard workers, am married to a relentlessly hard worker (Korean hard worker), whose parents work twelve hours a day, six days a week and no doubt wish their American son-in-law had something akin to drive. With all this, you’d think I’d be ashamed of my laziness, but you’d be wrong. I’m not at all. And here, I don’t even have to pretend to apologize for it. Weekdays, I wake up, when Sandra noisily readies and leaves for the office, and lay in bed a while, contemplating getting up. When I finally do, I drink coffee and read for an hour or two. Eventually, I’ll enjoy a leisurely breakfast. I might shower. Then I’ll write for a few hours. I may go meet Sandra for lunch and feel vaguely threatened by her questions: “What do you do all day?” Afterward, because I’ve got my camera in my pocket, I’ll take a different route back to the apartment and see what I see (horses, etc). If I get back and Inosh, the room boy (as he calls himself), is cleaning, I’ll try and stay out of his way, maybe head to the gym, or the pool (it’s probably too early for a beer). When Inosh has finished cleaning, I might return to work, or read some more, or nap, or go shopping for bootleg music and movies, or knock off football jerseys. With any luck, I may go play some football (soccer; more of that below) with a Brit I met, and if not, it’s probably okay now to have a beer. After Sandra gets home, we’ll go have dinner somewhere, and when she inevitably falls asleep at 10:00 (after a conference call), I’ll go downstairs and listen to one of the cover bands, or walk outside, looking for other places I might wander into (last week, I happened into a den of prostitutes and was instantly mobbed; avoid, or don’t avoid, the Winter Niteclub). My weekends have a similar trajectory. Last Saturday, I went with our friend Gayshan to watch rugby—“The Big Match,” the 65th annual Bragby Shield between Royal & Trinity—and under his tutelage, drank beer for the better part of 24 hours (though that’s not a typical Saturday; usually, the shift is limited to no more than a respectable 8 hours). So, this is my life, the life I’ve always dreamed of (though, I fear, it may not be the life parents dream for their children), the life whose horizon is but a short two months more, and while I’m here, I’ll continue to live it without apology, before returning home to the real world of duty and responsibility (provided I still have a job; I pray none of my employers will happen upon this disclosure. If one happens to, please understand I’m really a very dedicated worker).
IV. Finally, Toto
I’ve never been to Cuba, but I hear the streets are full of classic American cars from the ‘40’s, ‘50’s, and ‘60’s. I imagine that must be quite a sight, especially interesting to Americans fortunate enough to travel there, an odd reminder of home’s yesteryear. I mention this because, in one respect anyway, Sri Lanka has its equivalent: music, the influx of which apparently ended sometime in the late 1980’s. It’s as if, somehow, while the radios kept playing, while MTV hit the airwaves, while, years later, the internet buzzed up out of the ether, here in Sri Lanka, the music remained frozen in time. There never was a Nirvana to turn the page on keyboard-guitars and synthesizers (like punk did for disco), never that boy-band bubble (excluding the likes of New Edition, N.K.O.T.B., et al), never a hip-hop and rap blitz (all apologies to Hammer), never a 50 Cent to thug up and make the mainstream ‘legit’ (save the originators like RUN DMC). Instead, it’s George Michael in the grocery store. Peter Cetera in a taxi. Belinda Carlisle in the hotel lobby. INXS at the gym. As mentioned earlier, a couple nights a week I’ll go downstairs and listen to the cover bands. They’re pretty good, two especially, and I should say that their catalogues aren’t solely composed of ‘80’s numbers. CCR is a favorite. I’ve heard some jazzy Willie Nelson. “My Girl” is always a big hit with the crowd. One guy does a fantastic Elvis medley. But mostly, it’s an ‘80’s parade. Robert Palmer’s smash “Addicted to Love.” The Police’s “Every Breath You Take” (greatest stalker song ever). Huey Lewis & The News and their “Heart of Rock and Roll” is still beating here. Bonnie Tyler’s “Total Eclipse of the Heart” (a lunar eclipse may only last a few hours, but an eclipse of the heart goes strong for 26 years and counting). Bon Jovi’s “You Give Love a Bad Name” (but a great song). Ratt’s underappreciated classic “Round and Round.” The list goes on and on. There are, however, two distinct favorites. Coming in at number two on the charts is Bryan Adam’s classic “Summer of 69.” I’ve heard this song more in the month I’ve been here than I did in the entirety of 1985. One night, a band played it three times. First, of their own choosing, then as a request from a very drunk man, and finally, as an encore (which set the very drunk man to dancing as if in Pentecostal praise). Without question, however, the number one song on the charts, and in the hearts, is Toto’s peerless classic “Africa.” Every band I’ve seen has played this song. Some do it better than others, but the quality doesn’t seem to matter. As soon it starts up, everybody’s moving, dancing, drumming, singing (everyone knows the words), and there’s a palpable swelling in the room as it builds and crests with the synth-organ solo, and then the song delivers on its promise, comes back to bless us as much as “the rains down in Africa,” and, noting the frenzy it sends people into, I can only conclude that it is Sri Lanka’s national anthem.