Thursday, 19 May 2011

Flat out.

Having finally left my apartment in Tiburtina, your intrepid blogger is now living in a three-bed flat very near Termini. This fact has been announced with no small aplomb: having been sandwiched between a stoner student who intends to take some form of module about the history of narcotics, as part of his Theory of Communication degree (I kid you not), and the late night karaoke fans (of which the infamous Laughing Girl was clearly their tribal chieftain), I could not get out of there fast enough.


Some photos of the new flat and environs:


1) Hallway 2) Courtyard underneath balcony

3) Household goddess 4) Front door in the distance


5) My room

6) Kitchen

So the current location is very near Date, which used to be an advantage for obvious reasons. I made it very clear that I wouldn't turn up uninvited, with the pretence of borrowing a cup of tarelli. Maybe if I'd made it clear that if I intentions to be a stalker, I'd take the opportunity to turn up late one night, claim my housemates had deadlocked the door from the inside of my flat and claimed sanctuary/a warm snug-hole for the night. Pissed. At 2am. Which I, in fact, had to do.

Here, it is the 'Maria Celesta' (ref. Italian 'Marie Celeste' - see how well the language is coming along...). Housemate Lee was a phantom, a figment of my imagination: never in the flat and the doors to his room locked and bordered up with newspaper. I was promised his room next to mine, complete with french windows and balcony, and double bunk bed. But I never actually met the elusive stranger.

Apparently he had been living with his other half, although secretly I imagined that he was lying dead behind the door, murdered by an English language student whose last thread to sanity was learning the present perfect. Poor Lee might have met his end being bludgeoned to death with a copy of 'Headway: Elementary Business for Beginners" whilst one Giovanni screamed "Finite action in the past with result in the present, auxiliary verb, past participle." If we English can't really use this tense accurately in our native language (think about the difference between: 'I said to you' and 'I've said to you': If you said something to me and you remember it now, is that not the present perfect, dear reader?), then there's not much hope for the EU. Forget rescheduling post-recessional debt, just try explaining the difference between 'some' (toxic loans) and 'any' (attempt at rescheduling national debt)

Go on...try it.

This poor salty sea dog should be surprised:
the only way to leave the Eurozone, being billions
of euros in debt, is to Jump. Ship.


Which brings me round to one of my favourite classes. Late on a Tuesday evenings, I wind my weary way to the south of Rome, an area called EUR that was created by Mussolini as a tribute to the power and greatness of Ancient Rome. Think a vast open-plan landscape with the 2D quality of a American sitcom film set, coupled with sharp edges and a constantly brilliant atmosphere of crystal clear sunshine. And a smattering of fascism:

No, your eyes do not deceive you:
this does look as if a horse has fallen onto a soldier.
But an imperial looking soldier, mind.


This class is one of my favourites: all advanced level, so telling them why it is constitutionally impossible for Kate Middleton to become Queen of England is easy (because if I see one more poster with the words 'Sarò Regina' ('I will be queen') next to Kate's face, I'm going to lose it big time. In a very unEnglish way. Which will probably involve random gesticulation and half a packet of Malboro Red.)

Anyway, the class
consists of a number of unmarried women above the age of thirty-five', in itself not a remarkable phenomenon in Rome. It's no surprise to learn that birth rates here are so low, when courting rituals habitually involve women fending off multiple male advances by pretending to be their mother and desexualising them. Or where teenage ragazzi will spray paint the pavement with long exclamations of affection, only to find their potential mother in law scrubbing the letters off the side-walk the next day. Love, it seems, ain't 'facile.'

After practising the 3rd conditional, past modals and regrets/speculations for the entire lesson, I noticed the energy in the class was distinctly lacking. Which will happen in 25 degree heat with no available water to drink. I pulled out a game, hoping to lift everyone's spirits and reluctantly everyone agreed to ask each other what their big regrets were in life, using the grammar taught for the past hour and a half. I stress that this is an educational game, but sometimes the irony of such exercises stick in my craw. Fun and the Third Conditional. Yeah right. If only there was a version of Twister that helped you practise pronunciation.


However much you think you could get away with
providing 'end-of-course tipples', don't.
No really, DON'T.


Antonia, a timid woman who had been remarkably quiet for the entire lesson, suddenly let rip:

"I wish I had been born in another country because if I had, I wouldn't have had to put up with this terrible form of Government that we have in Italy. It is disgusting how politics works here and I feel ashamed to be Italian."

Silence. It was word perfect (which was my first thought, followed by thinking that silence in a class = confusion or social death.) Sharon, a blonde-haired, 'Sex in the City' styled, self-proclaimed Jewess (and proud) turned to her and said: 'Well, I was going to talk about my English being better had I lived in London, but we'll go with your suggestion.'

You say 'Corazzo', I say 'Carozza' (let's call the whole thing off)

Pablos is the landlord and now my single flatmate, a bar-manager at a local Irish pub/watering hole near Santa Maria Maggiore. Of Sardinian and Greek descent, Pablos' accent lies somewhere between a giggly Graham Norton (when the bottle of sweet white wine in the fridge - that is ALWAYS on discount in the local supermercado - is getting empty) and Ariana Huffington. (Sorry, that's the real Ariana Huffington, but I couldn't resist the link!)

The first mystery upon moving in, aside from trying to determine who the other mystery housemate was, was connecting Pablos to the surname 'Carozza', which adorns the buzzer outside the big wooden doors into our communal courtyard. However, as I soon discovered, each dutifully paid monthly amount of rent is exchanged for a receipt, acknowledging payment made to the ''owner of the flat''. Who might just be, well, anyone's guess.

Aside from frequenting the local gym at the station (lovingly refitted with the monica 'Fitness Fist', due to...things I'm not sure I'm permitted to mention in this blog), Pablos remains squirrelled away behind the closed doors to his room, only reappearing to shuffle down the hall-way of our (what was recently described as a New York deli) apartment to leave his things in the large china, industrial sink in the kitchen. Without washing them up. Again.

A war of attrition has broken out over a plastic blue lemon squeezer that is now pale green with the remnants of citrus fruit from yesteryear. It has travelled from the drying rack back to the sink - where it waits to be washed up - and back to the rack (unwashed) so much, it feels like a familiar friend returning to visit us every so often. A friend that regularly sleeps in the street, face down, in a puddle of of its own shit.

Considering passive/aggressive note-leaving along the following lines:

A haiku seems too poetic for being faced with
a pan full of grease being left to soak INSIDE the oven,
at 7:15am on a Monday.


Muccaperitivo

Yesterday was the first of a series of events I'd like to instigate within the Italian capital called 'Muccaperitivo', based on the amount of booze and food I can get my friends to forcibly inhale before we set off for club Mucca where we throw ourselves around to the finest pop choons and generally cut loose. Mucca is an epic superclub, housed on Via Portonaccio, boasting three floors of music, 10 euro drinks made from 6 different types of alcohol, smoking (or a complete disregard for EU rulings) and go go dancers whose modesty relies on invisible string.



Our intrepid crew removed itself to Mucca with the help of two designated drivers and we arrived around 12:40 to be admitted with discount stamps on our hands. It was a matter of minutes before S, the Big V, Harmony, Andy and Addy and yours truly found ourselves getting our groove on to the sounds of Rihanna, Gaga and Bouncéy.

This truly is a superclub: no matter what colour, size, shape, sex or persuasion, all are welcome (to queue at the bar for an inordinately long length of time...oh! I forgot to get my receipt before paying again...whoops!)


Muccaperitivo. Part One :D

Sweaty, sticking to the floor and spilling vast quantities of strawberry alcohol all over ourselves, we tried out each floor's music, deciding to inhabit the second floor. However whilst searching for the others, and attempting to impress a group of dancers with my skills, I leapt over a block of glass, underlit steps only to send my cranium careering into a low part of the ceiling. Cue: pain and a flawless recovery, in much the same way that Olympic gymnasts perform when they royally fuck up a routine, only to spring-board themselves towards a finale with a perfect finishing position.

(above) "I've broken my ankle, sprained my calf muscle and damaged my pelvis but Christ! I look good doing it."

Now, there is only a small tramline red line across my head, a testament to the problems you encounter when you are 6ft 4 with no hair to act as whiskers. Low ceilings = new nemesis.

Having had our fill, we regrouped by the guardaroba and attempted to exit, only to have our way barred by several bouncers and a gathering group of partygoers. It seemed that some disgruntled parties that were trying to get into the club were denied and so decided to throw a metal railing at the glass windows onto the street. Which would have explained the enormous crack...evidence of the Rapture?

Eventually, we left via the emergency exit, and having got home and into bed by 4:30 am, I felt virtuous if not slightly concussed.

Ah well, I reasoned, all the better to sleep deeply ;)


(left) The Rapture: proof that even the shortest skirts have a chance of eternal bliss.









3 comments:

  1. Going to wait to read this one tonight .... like a congratulatory present for making it through Monday ! jeejee x

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  2. Aaah cheers Moo, such a nice thing to say :) Hope all is fantastic down San Sebastiene way - more of your fantastic photos please!! x

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  3. Yeay, read it :) Sounds like an ace weekend, scars always make good stories in the future, jeejee :) Is that Adrianna women for real ? THats madness - jajajaja. And Sharan, sounds like here name is very appropriate;) Yes, more photos will come soon.... xxx

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