Friday, December 2, 2011

A wooden leg named Smith

Last night I finished an eleven day conference. As I was pushing my scooter from its parking spot, a car turning the corner ran into me, knocked me down, and ran over my foot. In contrast to my last accident, which happened days before my brother's wedding, this has been a relatively easy experience. The Swiss health care system was incredibly efficient.
My coworkers have been lovely. One escorted me to the hospital and then to my house, where he took Desmond out and even gave me a lesson in how to use crutches. Another took care of bringing my scooter to the office, and yet another took the computers I was carrying. The Danish Red Cross team witnessed the accident, and they gave police statements and cared for me while I was waiting for the ambulance.
Last weekend at TEDxRC2, I saw a presentation by a doctor from Afghanistan who ran a prosthetic clinic. He told us about an afternoon when the streets of Kabul cleared suddenly, leaving only a man, Mahmoud, in the middle of the road. The man had no legs and only one arm. Although the doctor's clinic had been closed by the government as "non-essential," Dr. Cairo asked Mahmoud to meet him there the following morning. The leg-less man, with a line of others, were queued before the doctor arrived.

After Mahmoud received prostheses and learned to use them, he returned to the clinic, asking for a job. He said that he was tired of begging and wanted to do something that would make his family proud. He didn't want a hand-out; he wanted work. The doctor was skeptical, but gave Mahmoud a week's trial. Mahmoud became the most productive worker in the artificial leg factory. This instigated a policy of "positive discrimination," wherein the clinic proactively tries to hire people with disabilities to create opportunity and hope for others. (P.S. Keep an eye on www.tedxrc2.com for the touching video of Alberto's story.)

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Black Thursday? What next?

The NYT had an article on Veterans Day about stores in the U.S. opening late at night on Thanksgiving evening in order to beat the Black Friday rush. On the same day on Facebook, a friend posted a picture of Nordstrom's sign, which announces that they do not decorate for Christmas until after Thanksgiving. I have boycotted Macy's since 1992, due to their progressively more advanced Christmas decorations, which I believe now appear around Labor Day. Barring the obvious arguments about loving the season you're in and the commercialisation of a religious holiday, I think there are some other considerations afoot with this advance Black Friday movement.

I live in Switzerland. One of the first things I learned about Geneva is that all businesses are closed on Sunday, with the exception of 1) restaurants; 2) bakeries (the Swiss feel fresh bread is a natural right); 3) farmer markets like the one right near my flat; and 4) businesses willing to pay double their employees' salaries for working that day. This is because they view Sunday as a family day. They also close business around 7pm daily and actually in the past few years voted against having later shop hours. The result is that not only is it somewhat harder to get quotidian errands done, but one also does much less mindless shopping. I consume less here - and that's actually rather good.

Friday, November 4, 2011

It Isn't Enough to Love; We Must Prove It

I just finished reading The Happiness Project, picked up during a layover in Atlanta. Tonight, I glanced for the first time at author Gretchen Rubin's site, and her video challenge of the week is to hug more, kiss more, touch more (appropriately, of course). She closes her brief injunction with a quote from St. Therese of Liseux: "It isn't enough to love; we must prove it." (N.B. I know Mom will love this quote, since she urged me to visit her patron saint's chapel last year while I was traveling with a friend in Normandy.)

Reading about a contemporary's search for greater happiness, divided into 12 monthly installments, struck a chord with me, particularly as the reading coincided with the celebration of my birthday, an entree to a new year. I don't know whether to call it stubbornness, procrastination, or simply the hunt for the "just right," but I am still formulating my resolution - my challenge - for this new year of life.

But I'm coming close. A friend posted a birthday wish on my wall, that he hoped this was the beginning of a year full of magic, wisdom and love. And those are the right elements.

Saturday, September 17, 2011

Feeding the Angels

Thursday morning, walking Desmond in the park next to my temporary flat, I noticed a man on one of the benches. He was surrounded by shopping parcels (everyone here uses recyclables!) and was eating something out of a bag. I had noticed a small shed in the far corner of the park weeks before, and Friday, it had a sleeping bag spread out, visible through the bent tin door.
Desmond woofed at him - of course: he's male and a stranger - and then stopped, sidling up to investigate what he was eating. Opportunist. I apologized and shooed Desmond away. And as we returned along the path, the man approached and asked my name and place of origin. He was pleasant and friendly, and yet I did not tarry long, in part because work awaited. His name, he'd said, was Seraphim.

Seraphim stayed with me that day, an invisible presence, but a source of pensiveness and perhaps guilt.

Sunday, September 11, 2011

My Avocation and My Vocation

Years ago, I was reading a favorite author and came across a reference to "Two Tramps in Mud Time," by Robert Frost, an American poet whom my family often quoted. The final stanza struck me then. Its resonance has deepened through my adult years:
But yield who will to their separation,
My object in living is to unite
My avocation and my vocation
As my two eyes make one in sight.
Only where love and need are one,
And the work is play for mortal stakes,
Is the deed ever really done
For Heaven and the future's sakes.
The poem was written in 1934 in the midst of America's Great Depression. The author is chopping wood when two tramps emerge from the forest, one stopping to watch the author, wanting - no, needing - to substitute his own hands on the axe in order to earn a bite to eat, an indoor refuge from the mud and chill of an outdoor bed.

Why do I write about this today? Ten years ago today, on a beautiful Indian Summer September morning, I was working from my home in Arlington, VA.

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Give Us This Day Our Daily Bread

Today was my first holiday, the Jeûne genevois, which is traditionally a day of fasting. The curious - or perhaps less curious once one begins to know Geneva - exception is supposed to be la tarte pruneaux (plum tarte). Being the wonderfully good celebrater that I am, I plunked down my francs for a tarte this morning, when my local bakery was open.

The Swiss take family very seriously. In Geneva, shops are closed Sundays so people can spend time with their families. And from what I have seen of people in cafes, parks and along the lake, this is exactly what they do. Restaurants and cafes can be open... as can bakeries, but any other business must pay its employees 50% extra for working on Sundays. This, in a town where shops close at 1900 daily anyway...

Friday, September 2, 2011

In the Land of Many Fabrics

Thanks to @chris_saeger for referencing the 100th Anniversary of The Secret Garden. Barnes & Noble Community commentator Sarah-W writes about the life of author Frances Hodgson Burnett and reveals this nugget from Burnett's personal writings:
What is there to feed my poor, little, busy brain in this useless, weary, threadbare life? I can't eat my own heart forever. I can't write things that are worth reading if I never see things which are worth seeing, or speak to people who are worth hearing. I cannot weave silk if I can see nothing but calico--calico--calico.
Geneva is, without a doubt, a land of many fabrics. More than one person has remarked that Geneva is not truly Swiss, as most people here are from other lands. Having spent so many years in Washington, watching and welcoming others to my town, it is interesting to be on the other end of the spectrum. In a conversation with "international woman of mystery" Laura G, we discussed approaches to creating a community in a new town.

Friday, August 26, 2011

Homesick for Disaster?

Tonight's blog was going to be about Geneva. But I find myself spending the evening balanced between swirling my mind through a multicultural diaspora and telescoping focus to the U.S. East Coast. On the one hand, I have discovered television after a 3 year hiatus, and it's fascinating to see the world through Swiss eyes. I have about 40 channels, I think, and there are at least 6 languages officially represented - 7, if you recognize Winston Churchill's observation that the Brits and Americans are two nations divided by a common language. Tonight alone, I have seen:
  • Chinese drama, dubbed in German with French subtitles
  • A Chilean documentary dubbed in Portuguese
  • CNN
  • French stations - mostly news
  • Italian soap operas
When I left work, the Genovese German lady who works for my French boss was speaking Spanish with the cleaning lady.

In my heart, I know this is the right place to be. But strangely, I find myself watching the East Coast of the U.S. almost longing to be part of the fray.

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Serendipity - Found an Apartment

Most people will say that finding an apartment in Geneva is extremely difficult. High density, high demand, and a very stable Swiss Franc contribute to this. There is simply a limited amount of space before reaching the lake or France. Due to these factors, finding a place to live is competitive, and one hears stories about 30 people applying on-the-spot and then each application being compared against the others to determine who is the most desirable tenant. This involves a "regie" or a Swiss rental agent, which can be made even more challenging if one does not speak French.

There are several approaches, including renting through an agency, buying (expensive!), renting from the owner, and subletting. Subletting - often these are found through office bulletin boards and English language (and others) sites like World Radio Service or Glocals. The process of finding a place can take months. I found an apartment in 5 days.

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Moving Desmond Overseas (US to Switzerland)

I moved last weekend from the United States to Switzerland with my 3.5 year old labrador, Desmond. Prior to moving, I read websites and blogs (See Claire's Ale), visited the veterinarian over a month in advance, and even spent 30 minutes on the phone with a government official from USDA APHIS (U.S. Department of Agriculture Animal Plant Health Inspection Service) Veterinary Services. (This was cute, yet frustrating, as he tried to help me navigate the website by indicating that I should highlight words, then click on them in order to move between pages.)

Prior to a move into an EU country (Switzerland adopted the EU regulations), one must have a sheaf of paperwork and some advance work.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Testing the Waters of Lac Leman

In preparation for my upcoming move to Geneva, I'm in for a one week consulting trip to the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (the Federation or the Secretariat). It has been an interesting series of meetings, training and meals, and I think there are some challenges ahead that will keep me well busy starting next month.