She plugged her headphones into her ears
and pressed the triangle on the touch screen of her iphone -
play. |
The tinny
intro to Slow Show by The National
bounced around inside her skull.
You should probably listen to this song as
you continue to read:
Ready?
OK.
She plugged her headphones into her ears
and pressed the triangle on the touch screen of her iphone
– play.
The tinny intro to Slow Show by The National bounced around inside her skull.
– play.
The tinny intro to Slow Show by The National bounced around inside her skull.
She couldn’t remember the last time she’d
heard Slow Show… and she never
realized how tricky it is to say Slow Show repeatedly.
Slow.
Show.
Slow. Show.
Slowshow.
I think you need to say it out loud three times to understand what I'm talking about.
Slow.
Show.
Slow. Show.
Slowshow.
I think you need to say it out loud three times to understand what I'm talking about.
See? Tough, huh?
Anyway.
She was standing at the traffic lights,
standing with her bags by her side, when a foggy memory passed through her brain:
And there she was, in her mind’s eye, in
her one-bedroom apartment in Melbourne, listening to the song, listening to Slow Show, and dancing, alone.
Wait...
Memories pass, they overlap each other, you're never sure where one begins or ends, blurred scenes fading from one to another, interchangeable, and moulded ideas of yourself and your story.
And there she was, in her mind's eye, driving to Ballarat and singing along, singing along to Slow Show as if it meant…
Wait...
listen to the chorus of the song...
"I want to hurry home to you,
Put on a slow, dumb, show for you,
crack you up"
Memories pass, they overlap each other, you're never sure where one begins or ends, blurred scenes fading from one to another, interchangeable, and moulded ideas of yourself and your story.
Where was I?
oh yeah
And there she was, in her mind's eye, driving to Ballarat and singing along, singing along to Slow Show as if it meant…
something.
She had wanted to get married to this song.
She wanted to marry this song.
She wanted…
But that was 10 months ago.
And she wasn't 29 anymore.
"You know I dreamed about you
for 29 years
before I saw you"
The bing bom of the pedestrian crossing
broke her reverie and she wheeled her well travelled suitcase across the way.
She could have sworn she’d forgotten something. She had packed, as per usual, in a hurry. Not because it was a spontaneous trip but because, life just seemed to get in the way of an organized packing schedule. And so, she was leaving, as per usual, a little under-prepared and slightly unfinished.
She could have sworn she’d forgotten something. She had packed, as per usual, in a hurry. Not because it was a spontaneous trip but because, life just seemed to get in the way of an organized packing schedule. And so, she was leaving, as per usual, a little under-prepared and slightly unfinished.
The traffic signals wore on. Bing bom, bing
bom. This was the sound of her first week in Canada. She’d lost her credit card
card in Taxco, her make-up bag in L.A., her worries in Tulum, her dignity in
London, and her first iphone in Nicaragua. And so when
she arrived in Vancouver, Canada the aural scape of the city was her
soundtrack. Bing bom. Broke, unemployed and sleeping on a mattress on the floor
of a grimy hostel. She had been lost and lonely in Canada but at least the sun
had been shining then. Now, the once steel-blue city, had turned to a smudgy
grey-black. The charcoal-ness of Vancouver was only occasionally augmented by the
brilliant red of the stopped traffic lights and their speckled reflections on
the drenched-wet roads.
It was raining now.
It was always raining in Vancouver.
It was always raining in Vancouver.
She reached the train station and boarded
the train for the airport. She was headed home. Back to a place she’d run from
10 months earlier.
The skytrain pulled away from the station.
Sometimes, you could look out over the snow peaked mountains as the train made it’s
way downtown. It was a glorious relief and a validation that this city was…
fine.
fine.
If you sigh audibly now you’ll understand
how she felt about Vancouver.
But today the mountains were not out. Today
the city had pulled a very typical, cruelly dull Vancouvean day and the fog
and clouds obstructed the view.
And here she was on the train heading back
to Australia. Back to Melbourne. And she was listening to music on her new iphone.
It was music that used to make her
Once, her skin would tingle and her heart would explode, leaving a gaping bleeding hole in her chest. But now, she was reimagining them, making new memories from worn out, overused songs… and feelings.
feel.
Something.
Once, her skin would tingle and her heart would explode, leaving a gaping bleeding hole in her chest. But now, she was reimagining them, making new memories from worn out, overused songs… and feelings.
As she alighted the train at the airport, that’s when the intro to How to Make
Gravy by Paul Kelly bounced around her skull.
You should definitely listen to this song
while you continue to read:
And wait...
for the twang of the slide guitar...
It always reminded her of home. This song.
Of hot Christmases with fish on the table
and her cousin George’s laugh filling the room; It reminded her of her parents
singing along not knowing the words but making them up anyway.
It was chardies in sun, literally prawns on
the bbq and the nasal, wonderfully sweet hubbub of family conversation around
her.
And then. She blinked at the wetness in her
eyes. Was she crying? Aw gees. That
was a bit rich, wasn’t it?
The last time she’d cried on a plane was
when she’d left her friends Tim, Luky and Sophie after 5 excellent days in
Indonesia together. As the plane took off she suddenly found tears streaming
down her face. Perhaps it was the air pressure, but most likely she had cried back
then because she knew in this moment something had to change.
Just listen...
...for a moment...
and wait...
for those drums...
She wasn’t crazy about her current job in
Vancouver; she lived in what looked like a student dive basement suite; and it
took a fair bit to get Canadians in the winter to go beyond polite and
towards something that resembled friendship.
But Mexico had changed the colour of her
eyes and even though she’d failed miserably at times, things were different. She was different.
At least she hoped she was.
At least she hoped she was.
She’d met a boy who made her feel that
things were possible – or at least he laughed at her jokes and she at his and
that was enough for now. She had bought a warm Manatoba-winter coat, squeezed the hands of the people she was
grateful to know in Vancouver and had had her first white Christmas.
She missed the heat and the beach and the way people swore for emphasis in everyday conversation. But she had etched an outline of a life in Vancouver. And like her
ad-hoc packing job – it was as yet unfinished.
And so in a way she wasn’t heading home, she was leaving a home...
... of sorts.
And so in a way she wasn’t heading home, she was leaving a home...
... of sorts.
The End