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Thursday, September 11, 2014

Letter From Israel

elinor        אלינור   


   
                                                                                                                     

Australia, August 2014


Just came back from Australia.  Departed Israel during a ‘temporary’ truce in the war between Hamas and the Iron Dome; returned to a ‘permanent’ truce. No one knows exactly what that means yet but children are playing in schoolyards, so it can’t be all bad.

If there is an experience more stunning than leaving Israel during wartime and landing anywhere in Australia, I haven’t had it yet.  There had been efforts to bomb Ben Gurion airport just days before our departure.  Leaving on El Al, I realized I was undertaking what one might call a tightening of certain muscles, even though El Al is now equipped with anti-missile deflectors, or so we are told. Looking around the cabin I can guarantee that I was not the only one doing such exercises.

The route of the flight was weird.  It usually goes over one of the charming countries to the east of Israel, but this time we headed right down the Red Sea and over India.  Good that India is still talking to us. The path to Bangkok, our first stop, might have headed over Russia but no one wants to tangle with Russia these days, so other choices were made.  At that point, I fell asleep, figuring if they don’t know how to get there, hell with it.

If one is a member of MATMID, El Al’s cheery passenger club, one can acquire up-graded seating.  We were seated in the forward cabin in two seats right in the middle of the /\-shaped space.  If you enjoy being stepped on, becoming part of other people’s conversations and the local authority on whether or not the lavs are occupied, it’s a great place to sit, although without a chair back or a bit of unoccupied floor to use for ones bits and pieces, it has its drawbacks. 

Apparently we were sterling passengers because on the way back, we were upgraded twice during the same flight.  The woman ahead of me said she refused to have a mother and baby as her seat-mates, so we were shifted to accommodate her mishegass.  I never knew one could do that!  The second time was best.  Lots of leg-room and for the first time in years, I sat by the window. Had to watch my head when I stood up, though. 

Anyway, Australia.  Absolutely amazing place, so very laid back.  No one checks handbags, or cares if you speak Arabic, but don’t try to bring anything into that country which the cute little Customs dogs don’t like—that’s when you’re off to jail instead of heading for sand and sea. And it’s really funny for me to hear Sorry, I didn’t understand your accent.  Sometimes it takes two tries for me to understand that sentence!

At this time of year our usual destination, Melbourne, is freezing cold, so we went northward to a small town, usually warmer.  This year it was truly awesome, with only the most intrepid surfers out in the ocean; wind to blow a zipped jacket right off; days of rain and temperatures lower than those in the south, with phone calls from relatives and close friends that began Greetings from sunny Melbourne—and it was.  Tant pis, I thought, so what.  I’ve left both a Middle East war and an over-heated summer behind. I win.

cross posted geoffff's joint

6 comments:

  1. Good to hear from Elinor again.

    For completely different reasons, of course, I will be spending the next year away from home, beginning in about three weeks. Weather is certainly a factor in mitigating some of the sadness. In particular, I'll be hoping that if I have to be away from Philadelphia between November and February, hopefully most of that time can be spent in the South or on the West Coast, where I can at least hide from winter.

    Then again, there's also the possibility that I'll spend a month in The Infamous New England Vortex, pulling containers from rail yards to warehouses only a few miles away, for two weeks at a time, in four feet of snow on top of half a foot of ice.

    Wait and see, I guess.

    Ah, but anyway...

    Good to hear you're safe, and that Israeli schoolyards are alive again.

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    1. It is good to hear from elinor but she had very little choice in the matter.

      The last thing I did when I saw them off was to make her promise to send another letter. I find her letters fascinating and an art form. I always read them at least twice.

      Jay, I can't keep up with you old friend. Wherever you are in the next year and why, all the very best.

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    2. Thanks. Don't worry, I can hardly keep up with myself anymore. Heh.

      Temporary (I hope) career switch, I'm becoming a truck driver. Training is almost finished, and I should be out on the road by the first or second week of October.

      You have to do at least 6 months (though more likely a year) over-the-road -- living out of the truck for 28 days, home for two, then back on the road again -- before you can get a local (home nights) or regional (home weekends, and maybe some nights) route. Sorta like paying your dues.

      I'll make the best of my year, and try to see all the parts of the US I never would have otherwise seen. I'll definitely enjoy the solitude (just me, my phone, a rice cooker and a bag of books!), and will try to view it as paid travel.

      I hope I get to spend some of this winter in Texas, and parts of the South I've never spent time in, like Louisiana and Mississippi and Tennessee, and of course hope I can get back to California and Oregon once or twice at any time over the next year. Wyoming, Utah and Idaho would be nice to spend some time in next summer, as well, hopefully.

      Keep the letters coming!

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    3. Gentlemen, I thank you. Writing for an appreciative audience is the essence of blogging, is it not? Best of luck to you, Jay. That's quite a programme you've set out for yourself! Geoffff, there's never a quiet time in these here parts, as you know. Grist for my art form (loved that!). Hi Mike.

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  2. Elinor, welcome back home.

    I, too, very much appreciate your writings and participation here.

    You have my sincerest thanks.

    M.

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    1. Many thanks, Mike. When are you and Laurie coming to Israel? War's over (but, as I said, depending on the source of that information); High Holydays late this year, weather cooling slightly. I await your nod.

      E.

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