Speaking of the Weather

 

We’re having some weather in Alabama this week.   That’s euphemistic for “all hell broke loose on the weather front a few days ago,” or, in this case, “Tornado, ho!”  Two nights ago, the tornado sirens went off from 1 a.m. until nearly 2 a.m.,  and the children, dogs, and I sat in the laundry room with our bike helmets at the ready.  The sirens were totally unnecessary: the storm had been beating the house so violently that we were already awake and assuming the touch down in Oz would come at any moment.

Apparently, this is part of the Alabama experience.  Just like it was part of the West Texas experience.  And like a massive earthquake was part of the Turkey experience.  Mother Nature is eager to let you know that, wherever you go, you can’t outsmart her.  That’s her prerogative.

But that’s not my point . . .

All of this “weather” has got me to thinking about England.  And I have a bone to pick…with Winnie the Pooh.

Yes,  the bear with the blustery day adventures.    [insert a ‘Bah Humbug’ here]  His tale raises an issue of honesty amongst  A.A. Milne and his British compatriots. Lovely people, the lot of you, so please don’t take this the wrong way, but you are horrible fibbers and obfuscators where the weather is concerned. Yes, you are. Don’t deny it.

Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day.   Over in America, this title conjures imagines of  a lovely, warm wind wafting the wee bear about.   No mortal danger.

!!! No mortal danger???  The woods get “floodier and floodier,” Owl’s house is demolished, and Piglet is caught in a whirlpool!  This is a blustery day?   Well, in the Queen’s English, apparently so. . .

Soon after moving to England, I learned that anytime the weather prediction calls for a “fresh” day or “blustery” afternoon, you’d better zip up the coat (the WARM coat) or batten down the hatches. Batten down, board up, and leave town if possible.  But a British weatherman won’t say that.  They are an understated breed.

In Alabama, a funnel cloud forms and sirens go off.  In the Carolinas, hurricanes hit and we are told to board up and move out.   In England, we are told only “It will be a blustery afternoon.”

Case in point: the year is 2007 and I’m listening to the BBC weatherman call for a blustery day tomorrow. Next thing you know, I’m walking my children to school in  80 mile an hour wind. Blustery?  That’s hurricane-grade weather!   And still the evening news says, “It was a blustery day, with winds of 80 miles an hour.”  Just like that.   No biggie.

These storms closed down nothing in England—and while I admire a stiff upper lip sometimes, I am not such a fan of  young school children skittering uncontrollably across the street on their walk to school  or patio furniture launching itself  into the tree tops where it will dangle, precariously, over passersby in the street.    I’m not bitter, but that was my furniture in the treetops.  (And me in the treetops trying to rescue it.)  And that was the Stephenson family skittering out into the street.  (And me carrying my daughter’s large keyboard on my back, windsail-esque, and flying out into the street at each gust. . . while my 8 year old shrieked in abject terror—fearing either that I’d be hit by a car or take sail over the rooftops, I’m not sure which.)

So that’s a little bit of a rant, but let me just suggest that truth in advertising is a good thing.   Maybe weather forecasters and Mr. Milne should consider a slight renaming of  these “gusty” days:   “bat-out-of-hell blustery day” would get the point across.  Winnie the Pooh and the Bat-out-of-Hell Blustery Day.  It does have a ring to it.

And all of this begs a traveler’s question:  are Americans spastic about the weather, or are Brits absolutely inert about it?    The answer is. . .yes.

Apparently, even weather is a culturally-bound experience.

Und so, wie ist das Wetter in Deutschland?

Spoke too soon…

Here I am starting a new blog and very excited about it–can’t wait to share the joys,  surprises, and oddities of our life abroad. I’m excited, but I’m up to my earlobes in moving papers and moving boxes for the next two months, so it occurs to me that I’ve stepped up to the microphone too soon.

Ta-Da! Here’s my blog on living abroad. Only, oops, I’m not abroad yet. I’m still packing. So… Yeh… What to talk about now. . .

Well, for starters, the “place” I am right now isn’t Alabama or Germany.  It’s some strange no man’s land that you find yourself suddenly inhabiting when you’re knee deep in an overseas move.  My feet are still on Dixie soil, but my mind is racing manically, and exhaustingly,  between Deutschland and Bama.  Even when I take a moment to calm it and just focus on something relaxing, I find myself conflicted:  I start to daydream about how fabulous the Christmas Markets will be in Germany (Gluhwein, and chocolates, and snow…oh my!)  and find myself suddenly jumping up for my car keys, shouting, “I’ll be back, I just need to run to Macy’s and see if winter coats are on sale!”

Note to self: mantra of the week = be still and breathe.  No doubt, it will be a cyclical pattern: be still and breathe; run out and buy coats; be still and breathe; pack up items for storage; be still and breathe; run out and buy snow boots; be…you get the picture.

And I’ll revisit the blog in between, maybe reminisce about our last trip to Germany.  We’ve been there as travelers a few times.  In fact, my daughter was born in Heidelberg 14 years ago.  We weren’t living there at the time, we were living on the Turkish Mediterranean, but our local hospital had a few issues, so we opted to spend the Christmas season with family in Germany and have her there…but I’ll go into that story some other day.  Right now, I have to run off and buy coats.

december 2008 008
Last big snow storm we were in, and the last time my kids owned real winter coats–Ripon, England 2009

 

And now for something completely different. . .

Snow in Ripon, England. Winter of 2009.
Snow in Ripon, England. Winter of 2009.

I should have seen it coming, this business of pulling up stakes and moving overseas again. All the signs were there. And I was no novice.

But I didn’t.

Back at Christmas, I told my sister that I thought something was coming on. I felt a re-invention, a sea change, just on the horizon, but I couldn’t pin down just what it was going to be about. A midlife crisis, I assumed. (At 47, that’s what you always assume.)

Scroll out by a few weeks, and I would find myself in the kitchen of my Montgomery, Alabama home, drinking coffee and looking out the window at snowfall. Yes, SNOWFALL. In Alabama. THAT, my friends, is a seismic event. And here’s the thing about seismic events: sometimes they are the main show, sometimes they are the aftershock, and sometimes they are the foreshock. The rumblings of something bigger to come.

Silly me, I treated this snow as an aftershock. I got nostalgic for the 4 years we’d spent living in Yorkshire, England–the cold, wet, and absolutely glorious years. Since moving back stateside, we’d been in the Deep South–just as wet as England (not usually rainy, but so muggy that you could wring your shirt out and collect a trough of water most summer days), but never, NO NEVER, snowy. Yet, here I was. Drinking coffee and watching downy flakes fall. Ah, nostalgia.

Scroll out by a few weeks again. My husband has just returned from a two week business trip to Vietnam and Cambodia. Home 36 hours. Sitting across the breakfast table over still-warm coffee. And comes the shock. Not the vague rumblings of something at a distance. The main event. “I got an email before you woke up this morning.” I sip my coffee and turn a sleepy Sunday morning eye his way. “We’re moving to Germany.” I choke on my coffee, splutter, and mutter, “What?” I don’t remember exactly the conversation that ensued, except (and this I’m not proud of) a threat that if this was his idea of a joke, bad things–seriously, seriously bad things–would come his way.

Suddenly it all made sense. The sea change. The rumblings of something on the horizon. The re-invention, the tough changes, the big adventure–the whole enchilada, man.

So, now, the hard part begins. Tying up the loose ends of our life here. Packing up our worldly goods. Figuring out the logistics of an overseas move. Comforting our kids, who are leaving a great life they know and love. Moves are hard; hard and sharp edged. But I keep putting my ear to the ground and hearing those rumblings of something out there, just a few short weeks away now. Something big and astonishing. Another chapter in our lives as expats. New travels, new customs, new eyes to see a new world.

I’ll send you postcards from the road.