Buying bargains, again!


lundi, le 31 août 2009

This morning I set out to go and see The Shrink with a bunch of flowers under my arm and freshly baked muffins in my hand.

In the good times, L’homme and I often discussed how we battled to live with each other but how we couldn’t live without each other either. I’d joke and tell him that if he left me, I’d get myself a shrink to see me through.

When I hadn’t heard from him for almost two months after he stole out of my house with the trained stealth of a commitment phobic in his disguise as a cat burglar, I could no longer bear the pain and suffering. I took myself off to a shrink on my doorstep. And we’d agreed that this had to be an outcomes based process, a process that I could learn and grow from.

In the empty hours after L’homme’s departure, I’d gone through various notes and scraps of writing over the past few years. The underlying theme of my dilemma was always feeling insecure and self-doubting, essentially because I never felt that I was good enough. I’ve now lugged this baggage with me for way too long. This is also the baggage that mostly prevented me from looking at L’homme objectively, of dealing with him from a position of strength and it caused me to want and need his love and presence too much, much more desperately than necessary or healthy.

Last week The Shrink forced me to open a can of worms that spiraled me way past depths of despair, straight into hysteria. When I literally thought my body and being was going to be dissolved by the anguish, I saw a larva amongst the worms slowly morph into a butterfly. I gained a sudden and startling insight into myself. Now I need to start the arduous task of reprogramming the misaligned beliefs about who I am and what is real to form the real me and my real realities.

The not good enough me swam easily and freely in the stream of insecurity, of self-doubt, lacking confidence, but knowing where to hide and mostly go undetected. I now need to take an amazing journey upstream, against strong currents and rapids like a bright red, beautiful salmon to the spot where I was born, so that I can spawn the new me, resplendent with the wisdom, venerability and acceptance I often sensed, but mostly surprised.

I take flowers and muffins to The Shrink, to thank her for opening the can of worms and to remind her that she needs to guide me on my journey. Only once I’ve completed this journey, may I review my deep and true feelings for L’homme and reconsider whether possibilities of a future together remain. For now he has been moved to simmer on the back burner. Oh my love, my old, my sweet, my gentle love. From year to year as all the seasons fall, I love you more you know, I love you … still

On my walk home, there’s a fleet of security vehicles and the odd police van parked outside the neighbour’s house two doors away. The day time burglars were disturbed before they could make off with too many earthly possessions. But fear grips my heart and paranoia hastens my step home.

On my way to meet prospective buyers at my shop later this afternoon, I buy the newspaper. When I see the advert for a bar for sale, it occurs to me that it is such a ridiculously cheap bargain, I think I should buy it!

Fumbling with the shop’s locks, I notice that the source of overbearing and hugely annoying noise from the establishment next door is being unplugged, loaded on the back of a trailer and being silenced forever. I sigh a huge sigh of relief and feel mildly guilty about my continuous role in the closing of the business, particularly now that I am taking steps to sell my own.

When The Princess and I arrived at my shop this evening, I am surprised to learn that even the buzz that used to be on the corner, has moved on. Suddenly I instinctively know that the dealings I am busy with are the right ones. I’m just wholly unprepared for the emotions that come tumbling out when the purchasers I met with earlier in the afternoon, confirm that they will be taking my shop over.

It will be the closure of a huge chapter of my life, but, like the bright red, beautiful salmon, I will make the amazing journey upstream, against strong currents and rapids…

(Bargain properties for sale in the South of France I once dreamed of buying. The dream is still there, but has been moved to the back burner plate next to the one L’homme is simmering on.)

Jealousy, paranoia et Les Femmes


dimanche, le 30 août 2009

I will openly admit that I am a spendthrift with little parallel. And I spend on myself, on L’homme, on extravagant holidays, on exclusive weekend getaways, on luxury train journeys. Spending for sex, for love, for closeness, for acceptance, for approval, spending out of control to sooth the pain caused by the emptiness left by spending for all the wrong reasons.

Not long after we came back from France in August last year, it was evident that the spending spree had to be curbed and quickly. My shop was now licking up the cream in dollops that it once spread lavishly on my life. And access to funds was diminishing fast.

I had no choice but to thrust L’homme from the shelter of his wage the shop used to generate into the cruelty of an economic recession that offered little to aging white males with gaping holes on their resumes. And I expected him to accept this enthusiastically.

And disrupting the rhythm of the comfort I had provided him over the past more than two years, drove him straight back to the only rhythmic comforts he knew how to create for himself. The comforts of booze, of bars, of porn and of searching for uncomplicated sex. And then L’homme started putting his plan in place for his sudden, malicious and surreptitious departure from my life in June this year.

In mid-April we had a fight were L’homme debased me with one sentence: ‘I have no desire for you.’ My knees buckled, I steadied myself into a chair and tried desperately to control my raging emotions. He continued to accuse me of being paranoid about what he does and about continuously suspecting him of chasing after other women. And all my ancient insecurities about never being good enough, never being sexy enough, never BEING enough, fell nakedly to the floor, staring back at me, accusingly.

Am I paranoid? Yes, I do sometimes have bouts of paranoia, but about one thing and one thing only: about being assaulted, about being attacked, about being slapped through the face continuously by someone wanting money from me and bearing a gun. That is the beginning and end of my paranoia. I’m paranoid about being a victim of crime.

Am I jealous? Yes, I can be jealous. But only with reason, only when my insecurities are laid bare.

When I met L’homme, he boasted about the more than 150 women he had slept with in his then short life. With all his charm, his worldliness, his experience, I imagined him to be quite the lover. For the first two years I knew him, we didn’t have sex, we were just friends, a façade I managed to maintain, despite being in love beyond reason. But when together, we were always very tactile. And I can’t recollect how we managed to drink so much wine, smoke so many cigarettes and tell so many tales because I cannot remember us not kissing, not hugging, not touching each other. He’d come to visit and we’d roam the streets, hand in hand, arm in arm. And we’d fall asleep, mouth to mouth. But then one day he brought another woman along. They hanged on to each other, hand in hand, arm in arm. And I realised I was not as special to him as I’d thought I was. It hurt, but we were not involved and I hid my pain.

When the job he had was no longer viable, he moved to his parents. From there I got mails from him, telling about girls he had uncomplicated sex with and girls he wanted to have uncomplicated sex with. It hurt, but we were not involved and I hid my pain.

And then 18 months later, L’homme moved in with me. He was an aspirant author, writing his debut novel. I rushed out to buy him a computer, complete with legal software. At night I’d lie in bed and dream dreams of one day, maybe, while he was pounding away at his keyboard and pouring experimental concoctions of alcohol to awaken his muse.

It was at this stage that I should have realised that I liked him way too much for my own good. And that after liking comes wanting and needing that’s when somebody gets hurt. I fundamentally understood that people were neither heroes nor villains, they’re just human beings. They make mistakes, they fall in love. But I was far too naïve and infatuated to realise that I had fallen for one of those ‘I’m only human’ guys who go cadding after every sex pot who gives them the eye. And that after knowing the count of women he had pursued. But that I thought that was only exaggerated boasting. How on earth do you keep track of more than 150 different sexual encounters in any case?

And a month later he declared his love, laid out his conditions for the relationship, refused to give into any of mine and consummated the relationship with drunken sex. In the beginning we’d go to strip clubs, go off in search of girls, three-somes being one of his then fantasies. And we’d make love when we got back home, never really finding the right girl. And the sex was not the kind that I thought it would be, it did not make dam walls burst, the earth shatter nor the Eiffel Tower topple over. But being a conventional girl and sexually inhibited, I never had the courage to speak out, but had a strong desire for more passion, for more daring, for proving to this worldly, experienced man that I could shift my boundaries.

A year later we moved to a different city. The trips to strips clubs continued, one night dragging another couple home with us. His inability to perform set alarm bells off, but I ascribed it to the amount of alcohol we had both consumed. And that night I felt vulnerable and his distance was tangible. And I felt our by now shaky intimacy had been cheapened.

Shortly after moving into the house he liked and I paid for, L’homme started staying out late in bars without me. With the history of always searching for other women together, I was sure this is what he was now doing on his own. Our sex life had for all intents and purposes come to a grinding halt. Sitting on the kitchen counter one day, I plucked up the courage to discuss this with him. He glibly replied that he couldn’t have sex with me because it always looked as if I was six months pregnant. And all my ancient insecurities about never being good enough, never being sexy enough, never BEING enough, fell nakedly to the floor, staring back at me, accusingly.

We went to the Sewing Machine for sex therapy, the first of a few abortive joint counseling efforts. But before the real therapy had begun, L’homme had moved out of our home and into the bars, the streets, chasing skirts and pursuing promises of uncomplicated sex and getting the uncomplicated sex he so desired and finding women who desired him so much, they drop their pants as soon as they came through the door. This is not a figment of my imagination or wonderings of the jealous mind. This is fact. As told to me by friends, both his and mine, by himself and gleaned from his own writings at the time.

We once had an arrangement for him to house sit the many felines we had chosen together while I was off on a business trip. My house was being renovated by a wanna-be builder L’homme had met in a local whore house. On the day L’homme was meant to arrive, I got a call from him. He was in another city and had misread the dates or times or both on his train ticket, I don’t recall, but he would not arrive as agreed. It later transpired that he had followed a potential French love interest there for a few days of fun in the sun, the promise of uncomplicated sex and, it would surprise me not, the hope of a life back on French soil.

For the next four years we did not really live together, but saw a lot of each other. He often stayed over on weekends and every now and then would move back for a month or more. We had a closely distant, distantly close relationship. When L’homme was desperately ill, he’d move in, depending on me to nurse him, when his financial situation was precarious, he’d move back depending on me to tide him over, when he was hungry, he linger for a while depending on me to to cook him a delicious meal. When he was well, when he had two coppers to rub together and when his tummy was full, he’d leave as suddenly as he arrived.

L’homme was dependent on me for the comfort, security and stability I provided. And I did this unreservedly, because I love him.

Through all of this L’homme told some of his friends that the two of us were one day going to grow old together. And to the many who didn’t like me, he’d say they just didn’t know me. And through it all he always had profiles on internet dating sites.

In June 2005 I took L’homme to France with me on my Lucy Jordan holiday. I rented a convertible and drove through the streets of Paris with the warm wind in my hair. In the weeks before we left, but after I’d already bought and paid for the tickets, he behaved strangely. Some nights he’d be kinder and gentler. Some nights he’d be biting and angry. On these nights he’d tell me he’s no longer going to France with me. On the kinder and gentler nights he’d make holiday plans with me.

On the flight over L’homme managed to secure each of us a row of seats, an unheard of luxury in cattle class. Somewhere between dinner and passing out, he pleased me under the flimsy airline blanket. With pleasure rippling through my body, I knew it was the closest I’d come to joining the mile high club.

On our holiday L’homme was often distant, often aloof. Sex was unglamorously reserved on one or two occasions for tacky cabins in sex shops, always with some lesbian porn on the screen, L’homme zapping through the scenes with his toes. Most nights L’homme wanted to retire to bed early, very uncharacteristic of him. On the flight home I sat in a row of my own, shedding tears for a holiday which I had intended to pull us together, but felt had torn us apart.

Back home we somehow managed to keep the closely distant, distantly close relationship going. In September I’d booked a trip to a Eurocentric hotel in Mozambique. In the lead up to our departure, the ‘I’d love to go, I’m not going’ battles continued. Two nights before we were scheduled to leave, I pressed him for an answer and the truth came spilling out.

For months, since before our trip to France, L’homme had been hopelessly, utterly and intensely in love with his boss. On the Friday night in Maputo, we chatted through most of the night, him explaining the anxiety his infatuation caused and how, through sheer will and with brilliance of mind, he managed to overcome it. I tried to explain the hurt and confusion his actions had caused, but he ignored that in favour of his own perceived brilliance at beating the infatuation. The Sunday we had messy sex in the Eurocentric hotel before heading back home.

Three months later L’homme announced out of the blue that he was moving back in with me. Ostensibly to look after me and care for me, particularly after a recent burglary I had. He told me he loved me, he showed me that he loved me, he told me we were going to grow old together and he told me that no-one had ever been as good to him as I had.

I was deliriously happy. Oh la, la, my boyfriend’s back!! The shop was doing much better and life all of a sudden had meaning and prospects and I took his hand as he led me up the garden path. Only later did I realise that his decision to move back in with me was partially based on the fact that he didn’t like his digs at the time. But I was too happy to care. And those three long, hard years of desperately clinging onto a business through good times and bad times only to see L’homme on most nights, had finally paid off. I was so deeply content. I thought we had turned a corner and that no amount of hardship, would ever tear us apart again. And I never admitted to him that I never would just have closed the doors of my shop as I often said I wanted to do. In his time away from me, I knew as long as I had the shop, I would get to see him. Get to spend time with him. I would never close a door on that.

But in August last year we came back from France and the rot slowly but surely started to set in. There were always the bars and the booze, but now the porn started creeping in. Being forced to make decisions like a cat on a hot tin roof to avoid bankruptcy, I became needy of L’homme. I needed to feel his love, to experience his caring, to discuss options to hang on to a semblance of solvency. But L’homme was becoming increasingly distant, increasingly withdrawn. There were increasingly fewer sober moments to discuss matters at hand and the not so sober lashings out at me, increased. And my frustration grew. And the liking too much was turning into wanting and needing and it was evident that soon somebody was going to get hurt.

In these months I wasn’t concerned in the least that he was actively seeking uncomplicated sex in bars. In fact, in the past three and a half years I hadn’t given this a vague thought. By now his sex drive was so numbed by the effects of alcohol that it had been reduced to a vague possibility in the mornings only and then only with the help of little blue pills on the rare occasions that he drew enough desire from the girls on porn sites and felt obligated to penetrate me. On other occasions when he wanted to avoid the after effects of the little blue pills, I’d see him wank in the shower. And I wanted and needed. And by now he was again searching for uncomplicated sex, virtually, hidden under a Scrabble game he was pretending to play. It was complicating my life hugely. And all my ancient insecurities about never being good enough, never being sexy enough, never BEING enough, walked nakedly around the house, staring back at me from every corner, accusingly.

What L’homme never understood was that giving into my wanting and needing of him, of giving into sex with me, would uncomplicate my life and in turn, his. It would set me free of his dependency on me. And I was not able to articulate this then. And I increasingly could only see myself as the ‘Welcome’ written on the mat at the front door that L’homme wiped his feet on with every exit and entry and the glittering eyed, arms wide open, uncomplicated girl I once was, was gone.

What I didn’t understand then was that if L’homme had given into my wanting and needing in a really difficult time of our relationship, he would have had to overcome his fear of commitment. Pretenses of committing in good times is easy, it’s uncomplicated, because good times are by nature less demanding. Committing in tough time is what puts commitment to the test. Because then you need to stick with what you committed to. And when I put pressure on L’homme to act out the commitment he so easily verbally gave, the stable doors flung open and the horse bolted.

So, was I jealous? Yes, in the in-between times there were times that I was. You be the judge whether I had reason or not. Towards the end, I had enough work, business and financial problems of my own and only wanted and needed his love and these emotions ran so deep, that jealousy had no foothold. In the final analyses, jealousy was the furthest from my mind.

(This painting is lifted from a book L’homme gave me for Xmas in 1998. His inscription reads: ‘Dearest Ris, only dearest Ris, your beloved, L’homme.’ I love this artist and I have a painting by him we both referred to as ‘a painting to dream by’. This particular painting is called Les Femmes and the inscription beneath it reads: ‘You won’t find an image of yourself in running water. It’s the still waters that allow you to rest and find yourself.’)

A pink, play Saturday



samedi, le 29 août 2009

How time is fun when you are having flies? The last Saturday of every month means that my Bountiful Friend and I set off to a market in a nearby village.

My friend is large in every way; she stands tall, she carries more weight than she should, she gives with all her heart, she cares with all her soul, she cooks with all her passion, her presence will never go unnoticed.

My mother usually meets us at the market. We buy freshly baked ciabatta, a large assortment of fabulous home made cheeses, a healthy slice of imported French brie, the most divine olives and pickles and choose a comfortable table to wash down our feast with ridiculously large glasses of wine. Under the trees we discuss life and love and things we hold dear. From the speakers perched in the branches we hear the sounds of French café songs. Every so often I wipe not unnoticed tears from the corners of my eyes.

Today it’s warmer and the branches are turning light green with tiny leaves waiting to burst open. And in an attempt to bring some colour back into my life, I’m wearing a favourite soft pink cashmere jersey.

The Actress arrives with her daughters in tow, the one soon to be wed. Excited conversations about venues ensue and the engagement ring sparkling in the afternoon sun is celebrated with the happy clinking of generous wine glasses.

We walk between the stalls and marvel at the wares on display. At the curry and rice stand I linger a while and buy a few bowls for supper nights to come. This curry and rice is far superior to the church bazaar variety L’homme used to love.

Later we pack up our baskets and head off to a nearby wedding venue for the bride to be to inspect. The venue is aptly named Ducks after the many feathered creatures to be seen pecking on the lawns. Over the entrance hangs a sign: ‘In China, the duck is a symbol of happiness and fidelity’.

I ponder this walking over the lawns to the quaint chapel. Both L’homme and I love the French duck dishes of Magret de Canard and Foie Gras. We had happy times eating both of these, but fidelity?

The lawns beyond the chapel stretch down to the river. Very cleverly disguised by tall reeds are a number of the most beautifully decorated cottages, completely secluded and private. And I think that if times were different, I would happily have whisked L’homme here, for a few days of sensuous fidelity.

I turn on my heals, kiss my mother goodbye and hug her a bit longer than usual and come back to the reality of an empty house and an obligation towards The Princess.

(It’s the season where bulbs are in bloom and I could not resist buying some tulips the other day to brighten my house and to bring a smile to my face.)

Flowers for my witty friend


vendredi, le 28 août 2009

Today was a contemplating day.

I received another mail from my Witty Friend’s husband. In an earlier mail he paid tribute to his wife, and described her wit as ‘the ability to have an original response to events or to see humour instead of tragedy everywhere’. I couldn’t think of a more fitting tribute to her myself.

My Witty Friend’s husband is dying of cancer. About two months ago he embarked on a remarkable journey where he started documenting his life narrative and the key insights and lessons he gathered along the way.

In his mails he generally gives factual updates on his disease and treatment. And then discusses at length insights and learnings he gained on his path of developing a philosophy of life. He unreservedly discusses the highs and the lows and the everydayness thereof. He has thrown himself wholly and completely into the process of living and dying.

He takes a critical look at life. At its opposites, its contradictions, its night and day, its male and female, its yin and yang. And he warns against the box-like thinking these dichotomies may bring about, in favour of transcending the opposites and experiencing life in a more nuanced way, in all its complexity, in all its beauty and ugliness.

Long after I read his mail, his summary of insights gleaned from Thomas Moore’s Dark Nights of the Soul, stay with me: ‘Without a philosophy of life, you may be swamped by your emotions and believe life is meaningless. Today, people live by superficial values and naїve ideas. Instead of pursuing deep and solid pleasures, they lose themselves in light entertainment and general unconsciousness. In small portions it is worth pursuing for relaxation, but as a way of life it can lead to extreme passivity. It may seem painful to think and reflect, but bringing your own intelligence to bear on everyday experiences can add an essential dimension that gives it own kind of pleasure.

I draw enormous inspiration from what I perceive to be his almost unbearably difficult journey. I stand in awe of his strength, his perseverance and his determined will to find brightness in what the dark nights bring and to live in the face of dying.

And whilst the dark nights my soul has been experiencing since L’homme flicked the light switch with an assassin’s cold-hearted efficiency, is in no way comparable, I am determined to embark on a journey where I too can, ultimately, experience life in a more nuanced way.

Some time ago L’homme told me he couldn’t come back to me or stick out the dark nights of our relationship, because he needed to find himself and his own feet. I wonder whether his soul is experiencing dark nights and what insights he finds there, and whether they bring brightness.

But today I bring flowers to my Witty Friend, who with her wit, her optimism, her unfailing positive attitude, must be experiencing some dark nights of her own soul. And I want her to see some beauty when she opens her eyes.

(I was pleasantly surprised to thoroughly enjoy a visit to Amsterdam some years ago. I thought I’d be on my way to Paris after a day or two. I marvelled at the many, many flower stands and have heaps of photo’s to prove it!)

First summer rains



jeudi, le 27 août 2009

As so often before, I am once again wrestling with a deadline.

Changes were recently made on my computer in order for me to sit in front of the fire place in the comfort of my own home and to remotely access servers at our offices. And also to receive annoying office related e-mails such as ‘The sandwich lady is downstairs’. I’ve been battling to access these servers the last two days.

I couldn’t give a hoot about the sandwich lady, nor who is on leave or in the loo, but I do need to access some statistical software on one of the remote servers to get a better grip on this deadline that is gaining strength. This morning I manage to log on to the server for long enough to run the data. I’m impressed at the vastly improved capacity of the new version of the software and I slowly gain the upper hand on the deadline monster.

But then I realise I cannot export the data once it’s been manipulated. I send off frantic e-mails and feverously make phone calls. Only to discover I need to install a patch on my computer for the software to execute the export and this patch is way too big to be mailed to me or for me to download remotely.

The deadline is gaining strength and building up steam, ready to whoosh past my ears. Sometimes I love the whooshing sound deadlines make as they go past. But this is really a non-negotiable deadline.

I manage to outsource the data exports. Waiting for the files to arrive in my inbox, I contemplate patches that I could install to export the unbearable pain in my heart.

My mobile phone rings and my Famous Friend makes lewd propositions about food and drink at our favourite local a few blocks away. I convince myself that light comic banter with a caring friend will be the perfect tiny patch to install to momentarily relieve my heart of some of its pain.

Chatting heartily over a pizza with the obligatory glass of red wine, the skies start to darken. A single crack of thunder releases the first drops of summer rain from the burdened clouds. We marvel at the relief to the parched earth and watch as the downpour washes the dust of a long, cold, dry winter away.

This winter of my discontent was undoubtedly the longest and coldest that I had yet experienced in the city I call home. Physically and emotionally.

Driving home I’m reminded that my car’s wiper blade snapped off a few weeks ago. Best I get that sorted out before the late afternoon thundershowers arrive in full swing.

My inbox is bulging with huge files and I settle down to catch the deadline before the sun’s morning rays touches my lawn.

And I hope for the rain to wash the pain from my heart.

(A rainy winter’s day in Paris December 2004.)

The frog is back!


mercredi, le 26 août 2009

The Princess, her friend The Owl and I are all huddled on our favourite couch. The Princess has nuzzled her nose comfortably on my lap, The Owl weighs heavily on my lap, nuzzled close to her canine friend and I’ve nuzzled my nose in a paperback I cannot tear myself away from. Brel is lamenting a love lost or found or dying or waiting to die.

A sudden shrill sound hits three divergently attuned ears simultaneously. I run a quick mental check: we are beamed in, we are locked in, we are caged in, yet there was an unmistakably unfamiliar familiar sound. The Princess lifts her head and utters a lip smacking yawn, or smiles beautifully as my friend, the Global Investor, would say, and keeps an eye on the outside darkness. The Owl lazily repositions her claws for better grip, and peers outside with eyes that can see in the dark. My eyes dart from my book and with a stiffened spine, stare wide open into the dimly lit garden.

There was something familiar about the sound. It wasn’t a feline calling a human doorman to let him or her in. This is not Egypt, nobody is going to leave a baby in a basket …

Oh my god. Spring has not even sprung and the goddamn frog is back!!

One of the household chores L’homme had taken upon himself was to care for the once upon a time splash pool, now fish pond. In the days when we still spoke, he’d often say he cannot leave me because I would not take care of the pond. I would forget to feed the fish and I wouldn’t manage the filtration system and the pond would turn murky and pea soup green.

How right was he not? Well, the pond is not exactly pea soup green yet, but it is far more murky than it used to be under L’homme’s charge. But I haven’t yet mustered the strength to gain any semblance of clarity in my own mind, let alone a pond! And now, with no-one tending the pond, a tadpole or more has again managed to grow its pond side legs and is beginning to exercise its vocal cords in anticipation of summer nights to come.

This god and man forsaken pond has the ability to produce frogs with vocal cords that drown out all sounds that man can produce. No surround sound has managed to rise above the incessant croaking.

And involuntarily my mind drifts back to a New Year’s day that seems so long ago that it must’ve been before ‘Once upon a time …’

I had taken myself off to Paris, maison de mes rêves, for Xmas and days thereafter, because I could, because a hard year had drawn to a close and because I wanted to discover a Paris just for me. L’homme and I were living apart, but talking. While I was dressed in layers of winter, playing hide and seek with the cold, he was staying in my house. And as is his want when distance creates a playground of make-believe, there were many late night phone calls, many pretences of kindness many ‘wish you were here’ conversations.

He contacted The Ex-French Girlfriend and a night out was arranged. I do like her a lot, not only because she is beautiful and oh so French, but because she is kind, gentle, caring and seems to have escaped L’homme unscathed. And I so wish our means of communication was less challenged. I did sacrifice the best part of a day searching for an affordable present for her soon to arrive first born that fell way short of the riches she is accustomed to, but in the search I criss-crossed Paris. The wefts and wafts of shop in and shop out, too expensive and too cheap, strengthened the fabric of the Paris of my dreams.

On New Year’s Eve I had to leave la maison de mes rêves as just that. Savouring every last minute, I sat on the hand of Henri de Miller’s sculpture of l’Ecoute and whispered unmentionable dreams and desires to the ear to the ground and eyes turned to the heavens, before going for a nostalgic farewell dinner in a restaurant L’homme had introduced me to years ago. I nearly missed my flight.

In one of the many long distance phone calls, all on my expense, off course, L’homme had undertaken to meet me at the airport. In-flight, there was something liberating about sipping French champagne, drinking toasts to New Year’s lost and found, dreams left behind and dreams ahead.

I was greeted by a severely hung over, severely sleep deprived, severely irritated L’homme. Disheveled, shoe laces undone, unshaven, unclean, his own celebrations on his breath and in the stubble of his beard. My arrival was everything I had imagined it not to be. The bright light of a New Year’s day and face-to-face stripped the Emperor of his colourful cloak of long distance make-believe charm.

Back home spades and shovels, skimmers and brushes and chairs were in disarray around the pond. The purpose? ‘I tried to kill the frog, but he got away’ L’homme sheepishly answered.

L’homme, the court jester, who in a few words could make all anger, fears and trepidations evaporate and re-install a world of make-believe, of pretend and of maybe …

The braai fire was lit, we had New Year’s sex, as always, on the couch. An inconvenient place to linger, to savour the moment of closeness, of gentleness, to lie spent in each other’s arms, savouring the aftershock brought on by eruptions of pleasure, inhaling the sweet smell that only climax pushes through the pores and to mumble oh so sweet nothings. An inconvenience that suited L’homme.

The functional sex was over, the meat was on the braai and Paris was far away and another year was ahead and to endorse that everything was the way it is, the frog croaked loadly.

(Did I know when I taken photo’s of the fish pond earlier today that the frog would croak tonight? My favourite white fish glistening in the sun and swimming in the watchful reflection of the angels.)

Bien joué!!


mardi, le 25 août 2009

Ah, The Princess!!

No, no, no, she is not the cutest little girl with curly brown hair, the longest dark lashes, and easy smile, dainty and so girlish in her hand embroidered little voile dress from Portugal.

The Princess is regal, the most gentle of giants. She’s a hound of the Dane variety. And I am often amazed at just how very much I love her and how much joy a four-legged companion can bring.

In the early days after L’homme abandoned us, she was very protective of me in the park on our daily walks. She never strayed too far and galloped back regularly, just to check that I was still walking, still upright and that I hadn’t crumbled into a tearful heap as she had seen me do at home a lot.

These days she’d walk next to me, comfortable to have my hand resting on her back. She’d suddenly glance up at me, flashing the white of her gentle brown eyes before bolting off, toy in mouth, chasing after the imaginations of the canine mind.

Yesterday she managed to loose her last tennis ball in the tall grass. Today I bought her a new purple squeaky toy. She adores squeaky toys. She trots around like a Lippizzaner on show day, the first prize rosette firmly in her mouth and when she senses that she’s drawn the attention of fellow walkers, she throws her head in the air and squeakily tightens the grip on her prize. And for an encore, she rushes noisily into the tall reeds, jumping around boisterously, before peering out, just to see if her audience is still captivated.

When she was younger, she usually lost her toy in the tall reeds. But she’s realised that going back for it, frantically searching for it and triumphantly jumping onto the grass, toy in mouth, elicits wild and rapturous applause from me. She now almost always retrieves her toy and then proudly falls into step next to me.

Halfway through our walk today, she spotted her younger Dane friend. As usual, they ran towards each other like young lustful lovers, rearing up on their hindlegs and embracing like Grizzly bears in mock battle before falling to the ground and galloping off neck and neck in a high speed chase, slipping and sliding on the dry winter grass.

The Artist and I parked off on a bench, deep in discussion about the vagaries of life, our Danish charges playing hide and seek in the tall grass behind us. The unmistakable bark of Danish hounds snapped us back to reality, only to see The Princess sheepishly coming out of the tall grass, not with her purple squeaky toy in her mouth, but with her blue bag of treats stuck on her nose!

We laughed, clapped and thrilled and continued our walk.

On our home journey, the only traffic light we encounter on our daily trips, turned amber just as I hit the intersection. With gay abandon I yelled ‘Bien joué!!’ over my shoulder to The Princess. To her for having a fun day and surreptitiously sneaking off with her bag of treats, and to me, as a reminder of L’homme’s praise when I managed to narrowly beat the red light. I laughed heartily. She flapped her yowls and ears in the wind speeding past the window and to join in the fun, let out a loud ‘aboi’.

(The Princess contently asleep next to her current favourite toy – a little black cat. L’homme bought the little black cat for me on Mother’s Day this year with the words: ‘It would not be the first time a little black saved us’. On my mom’s insistence he joined us for the day and I mostly clung desperately to his hand and cried openly. Others were amused at how emotional I was about French music. I was distraught about how shaky our relationship was, delighted that he had joined us and utterly clueless about how to get things back on an even keel. The little black cat’s luck did not even last three weeks.)

Being a gargoyle


lundi, le 24 août 2009

I have just realised that most of my adult life has been a farce, in a burlesque kind of a way.

A part of me simply wants to die. Now. No more.

A part of me rejoices. Rather realise this now than not at all.

But that means I have to rebuild a whole life. And that may just be too hard.

Or it may be an enormous amount of fun!!

I feel like a gargoyle. Though the primary function of gargoyles is to act as waterspouts to divert roof water away from the base of walls, they have also been thought to ward off evil.

I’m more of a mythical gargoyle. I now need to find a new diversion for the water of my life and I need to scare off many beliefs held before. But like gargoyles, I do come alive at night when everyone’s asleep and I fly around, but mainly I protect the vulnerable me, the little, litlle girl.

(The richly decorated Tour St Jacques in Paris’ 4th ‘rondebolletjie’ with gargoyles against the beautiful blue, blue Paris summer sky. Taken on 16 July 2008)

All about a dress, funny that!


dimanche, le 23 août 2009

I have this dress that has been hanging in my cupboard for more than two years. I cannot recall ever wearing it. However, I do recall a day I wanted to wear it very, very well.

It was our first night in Paris in September 2007. We were getting ready for dinner with The Ex-French Girlfriend and L’hommes friends we were travelling with. I put the dress on, asked L'homme how I looked and he told me I couldn't wear it. He told me I was being ridiculous, it was not appropriate for an informal dinner.

I was crushed and devastated.

This was our first overseas holiday since we had 'renewed our vows' so to speak, with L'homme's decision to move back in with me in December 2005. We'd worked hard, we'd been through a lot of trauma, our 2006 overseas holiday literally got stolen from us. And through all of this we told each other we were going to grow old together, we told each other we could never find anyone better to be with. At times we hated each other, at times we loved each other. And in my mind we told each other all these things, knowing it would not be a smooth ride, but we'd enjoy the journey none the less.

I'd stopped smoking towards the end of 2006 and gained the obligatory nicotine substitution weight. I successfully beat my nicotine monster into oblivion with food and lots of it and it showed. But for this holiday I wanted to look good. For L'homme, for me. We deserved it. I virtually starved myself, lost a lot of weight, refreshed my wardrobe and packed for a dream holiday. We were going to have fun, laugh a lot, eat good food and have great sex. Away from the crime, away from the pressure, away from the fear.

But then my simple, elegant long black dress was not good enough. I was not good enough, was what I heard. I was ridiculous, was what he said. My money was good enough to get us to Paris, but I was not good enough to be there. Not with L'homme. Not with The Ex-French Girlfriend. Not with his friends. I was an embarrassment to him.

Yesterday I had a great feel good day. I bathed by candle light for the first time since L'homme left. I pampered myself. And I put on my simple, elegant long black dress.

I allowed myself to admire ME in the mirror. I indulged in ‘Love in Paris’ perfume. And yes, this time I really was overdressed for the occasion, but I felt great. I felt tall, I felt slim and, more importantly, I felt good enough.

There are many buckets on my journey of healing that need to be looked at. I had many of these buckets when I met L'homme. Many of them were nearly empty. Some of them he emptied for me.

But last night I added a bit to the 'I'm not good enough' bucket. I had a fantastic evening. I was witty and funny. I came home feeling great. More than that, I felt desirable. I took off my simple, elegant long black dress. I climbed into bed and played sensuously with myself until ripples of pleasure flowed through my body again and again. L'homme never saw me have multiple orgasms, but this is about a simple, elegant long black dress. Another time about our sex life.

I whispered 'faire bons rêves' to L'homme. And with a smile on my face, I slept with the angels.

(This is a photo I took in Paris on 04 Aug 2008 of a girl who was on the bus on her way home after work. Presumably with her lover. I thought she looked gorgeous, ever so French chic. L'homme asked her if I could take a photo. But her dress reminded me that in Paris one is never overdressed, never inappropriately dressed, no matter what the occasion.)

Some light shining through


samedi, le 22 août 2009

I woke this morning and for the first time this week I could breath. I could see some light shining through the storm clouds of my mind.

Last Saturday night L'homme mailed me a poem. Oh my love, my old, my sweet, my gentle love, a pseudonym fit for you. Your name is of old German origin and means 'free man' and that you have always been. No commitment, no involvement, free, always, always free. The English meaning is simply 'man'. So, you've become The man.

In the days when I was hopelessly in love with L’homme, he often used to write me poems. He'd ask me to give him a word, he'd work that into a poem. And I'd think he was so clever, so witty, so creative, so smart. I cherished these poems, as silly as some of them were. I thought this all too quaint. Ever so romantic.

I hadn't received a poem from him in years, and then on Saturday night it landed in my inbox. And funny, this one poem, in an odd kind of a way, summarises the relationship. The subject was: 'Do not reply to this' The poem itself quite Browning-esque: 'How do I miss thee - let me list the ways'.

And that's the way the relationship was. Always the discrepancy between words and actions. Always extremes. Words of love, care and growing old together were there, and meant everything to me. Except they were not acted out. And then doubt would creep in, insecurity would surface. And any request for action to match the words, would meet the most brutal rejection. Physically and verbally. And now he takes the action to reach out, but at the same time blocks me out. Funny that. It feels as if that is the way it always was. Pulling me near, pushing me away.

Tuesday was L'homme's birthday. I ached for him with all my being. His poem opened a way for me to send him a mail. It bared too much of my soul. Silly, silly me. L'homme can still use the same flimsy hooks to catch me, to reel me in. But with curt responses and silence, he cuts the fishing line and leaves me struggling in the water, bleeding from a hook in the mouth. I wonder whether he ever read the mail. I wonder if any of it meant anything to him.

And so the storm raged in my body with all its might for a whole long week. But today is calmer. I know I still love him. And I suspect he still loves with his limited ability to love. Is it still true that we can't live without each other, nor can we live with each other?

Who knows? L'homme has his own crutches, coping mechanisms and pharmacy for self-medication. He has the bars, the booze, the recently aquired webcam laptop, the porn, the cyber sex (and surely some real sex too with the help of little blue pills). All things play-play, make believe and chaff-chaff. The smooth talker, the charmer, into a panty, into a heart, into a purse.

And he will smooth talk and charm his way through the bar, he will play-play with the pussies, chaff-chaff the heart strings and spend-spend what's in the purse until only the coppers are left.

BANG!! L'homme senses commitment, he senses involvement, he senses contribution, he senses responsibility. He senses real-real. BANG!! BANG!!

POOF!! And he's gone. POOF!! Like magic! It was all just play-play, make-believe, chaff-chaff and smooth talking!

What, did I mention truth? Oh, yes, that. Well, that was also, just, well … I meant it in the moment, but the moment has passed …

Sorry for you with your dried out pussy, sorry for you with your broken heart, sorry for you falling apart, sorry for you being such a mess. It was all just, well ..

Ahoy, ahoy, this is not a drill!! You're gonna die, but I'm outta here ...


L'homme, the armchair specialist, the master wordsmith, he CAN deliver words with so much feeling, with so much conviction, he has years of practice. Part of play-play, make-believe, chaff-chaff. He truly feels very, very little for so very much.

He claims he cannot come back to me because he needs to find himself and his own feet. I'm bemused by that. L'homme, free man. He always came and went as he pleased. In and out my life, in and out my house, in and out his cave.

But today is calmer. There's some light shining through the storm clouds of the week that was.

And, my love, if the money didn't run out and I didn't need to feel your love to fill the void, would you still have left? I'm digging deep to let him be. Who knows, if I dig deep enough, I may strike gold.

Ah, but today there's a bit of light shining through the clouds. I'll go and frolic with my hound in the park. And today I will laugh at her antics, give her a big hug and dish out biscuits even if she does not bring the ball back. There's lightness in my step!

(This photo was taken at Emmarentia Dam on 18 Oct 2008. I love photo's of clouds. Well, actually, I love clouds.)

C'est une tout autre histoire


vendredi, le 21 août 2009


This is dedicated to everybody who has ever fallen head over heels in love with the wrong right person, ever had their heart torn apart, their soul trodden on and had to claw their way back from the crushing disappointment of unrequitted love. This is dedicated to those who arrive with offerings of soul food, intended to heal and to nurture, to nourish and restore, made strictly according to best kept secret recipes. Some are exotic, rich, fragrant dishes, some are the finest of French classics, some simple peasant food, some a slice of toast buttered with love in all four corners, some hot and spicy, some comforting old favourites and some refreshingly foreign and new.

But why is this a very different story? This story is no different to a story millions have heard, lived, hurt and healed over time. But this time I want it to be a different story for me. The emotionally difficult relationship I was in, was brutally, cruelly and maliciously ended for me on 5 June 2009. By then it had spanned more than 13 years.

Now it's time for me. I want to heal, I want to grow, I want to escape the emotional neglect, the emotional rejection, the emotional abuse. I want to be whole again, I want to love again, I want to live again.

I like the fact that the French translate a story, albeit an account or a tale, with the word 'histoire'. To my 'anglais' ear it sounds like history and this is what I want this to be - a documentation, a history if you will, of a voyage to me. It is intended to be the photo journal of Rispa Frances. And I hope to grow as great as my Dane and as soft, furry, independent and content as my many cats.

Rispa Frances is an obvious pseudonym, chosen for very personal reasons. Rispa then an anagram for Paris and Frances meaning 'from France' or 'Frenchman'. I'm an incurable Francophile and have a deep love of all things French, but I have a severe disability to master the language. So Rispa Frances will tell my tale.

Rispa works for me. With time she may become Ris for short. Ris de veau is right up there with Magret de Canard, Foie Gras and Crème Brûlée as my favourite French dishes and 'ris' is laughter. Laughter, good food, good wine and good company - what more could a girl want? Just a bit of love will do nicely, thank you!

(This photo was taken from Pont Alexandre III, the most beautiful bridge of all across the Seine. I love the look and feel of this photo. It is dreamy, romantic and a bit old-worldy. It struck me the other day that another anagram for Paris is Pairs. I never experienced Paris with L’homme as us being a real, involved, committed pair. For me, Paris and I are a pair. My soul is happy there.)

The Inspiration


jeudi, le 20 août 2009

Today I met an artist who embarked on a daily project some time ago. Looking at her creations, I was fascinated. I thought about the many projects I've attempted, the many dreams I've had. I'd think about them, consider them, kneel down in the starting blocks and then just walk away. Many of my projects have never even got out of the starting blocks. Some faltered at the last hurdle. Some were badly managed and maintained and neglected and failed in the end.

But today I met someone who does one thing each day. And has been for some time.

This inspired me. To do a little something every day that is creative and that I enjoy ... How great is that?

I've always wanted to write. I've always wanted to take great photos. So, this is a journey in words and photos. Some will be new, some will be taken from my archives. But they will all have meaning to me.

Some of it will be gut wrenching agony, some lashing out in the extreme anger only hopelessness and loss can produce, some will be crumbling under the weight of introspection, a desperate attempt to make sense of all this madness, this insanity.

But I hope that as I embark on this journey, there will also be healing. That I’ll be able to climb from this deep, dark, festering pit to a place up high from where I will have the most amazing mind expansive view and the lightness, the softness, the kindness I once so used to love.

This photo was taken on 24 July 2008 in the South of France. It was the end of an unforgettable barge holiday and our last night on the barge. We moored at Le Ségala and I took this photo. I'm very fond of this photo. I consider it to be one of my best photo's taken to date. And that on a moving barge with no tripod.

The inspiration for me is, like the tournesol, to keep facing the sun and like the bee, to keep busy, to collect nectar and to make the most delectable honey. A bit like the Miel de Forêt we had with cheese at the Michelin starred restaurant, Pascal Borrell, in Maury. Do you remember, dear?