Thursday 31 July 2014

Early Man Discovers the Smartphone

I've been meaning to buy a smartphone for years and finally got myself a second hand iphone on e-bay when I was in the UK a few weeks ago.  Apart from anything else I was curious to see why so many owners seem to find them more interesting than real life.  I'm proud of the fact that it's second hand, it makes me feel less of a victim of consumerism knowing I picked it up at about a third of the price of a new one and without having to enter into a hire purchase agreement thinly disguised as a mobile 'phone contract.


Four weeks later I'm attached to it like a baby to its mother's teet.  I use it for my shopping lists and I'm downloading an app a day to regulate my diet, provide me with a fitness programme and all manner of other useful things that I had no idea I couldn't do without.  I even take it running so it can tell me where I've been and how many calories I burned.  At night I go to bed with it playing me to sleep with BBC Radio 4.

Now I own one I suppose I finally understand the draw of the smartphone - it's the best handtool since man discovered the flint.  Endless diversion, analysis and connectedness in a slim package which sits easily in your hand and slides into your pocket.  I've no doubt that someone will soon market an app which will allow you to light a fire with the fucking thing.

Trouble is, now I've joined the billions of two-legged mammals who've voluntarily submitted to being tagged with one of these devices spewing out data on our location, speed, direction and consumer choices, I'm not at all sure whether I am using it or it is using me.

Wednesday 23 July 2014

Mimingo's Birthday

Lying on the couch last night watching TV I was alarmed to see a figure flit across the terrace and rushed out to investigate to find Elisabet had popped round from next door to invite me to Mimingo's sixty second birthday party.  I had just eaten but thought "what the hell" I should be a good neighbour and look in.
It was, as ever, an enjoyable and entirely undemanding evening.  I played hide and seek with the little ones, Domenica and Leandra, then sat down with the family and a few friends to eat and drink some home-made wine.  Mimingo's son Georgio showed me his growing collection of tatoos and everyone asked after Sue.  To be honest much of the animated conversation was in local dialect and entirely incomprehensible.  But I'm used to letting words wash over me and glean what meaning I can whilst nodding and smiling sagely.


Erminia sat quietly on the sofa for most of the evening, preoccupied I suspect with the fierce pain in her arthritic hip, but I was delighted to get this photo of her and her great granddaughter Leandra.

One of the great things about socialising in Italy is that Italians know when to leave.  No standing at the door for hour after hour summoning up the gumption to say "goodbye".  Round about eleven everyone just stands up and says "right, I'm off" and then, wonder of wonders, they ... go.  Amazing.

Tuesday 22 July 2014

Nocera Umbra Revisited

I visited our old friends Carole and Kevin in Nocera Umbra last weekend.  There must be hundreds of such hill towns in Italy that would not be out of place nestled in the background landscape of the Mona Lisa.  Their street plans are all similar, spiraling around a strategic hill like hunkered down snails, dark, introvert and defensive.

This one got a nasty shake in an earthquake in 1997 and is still getting itself back together.  A massive renovation is now finally creeping towards completion and wandering round the pristine but largely empty streets the place seemed like a symbol for Italy as a whole.  There is so much beauty here and history mixed up with so much ugliness.  A lot of the town has been beautifully restored, but there is plenty of jerry building and incompetence as well, so that after fourteen years there is still no clear end in sight and only a fraction of the former inhabitants have moved back despite the injection of millions of euros of public money.

The town comes into its own after dark.  Walking the deserted streets you can half see and hear the ghosts and like Italy itself, when the gloom hides all the crap you can almost pretend that the place is perfect, until a sudden zephyr of chilly mountain wind blows at you down a stone alley and provokes an involuntary shudder.