Letter from my Terrace in Palma 20 ´The Life of the City´
The Life of the City
28
May, 2018
Good morning,
When I used to drive into Palma to start
my day’s work, I would see a man setting out the tables and chairs on the
pavement outside his restaurant in a wide and busy street called the
Avenidas. Each day I had to wait at the
same red traffic light there. I don’t know why but that light was never green
when I reached it. Some traffic lights are like that. Anyway at this red light
I always looked over to watch the barman as he worked. But it was a pleasant wait. The man swung the chairs into place quickly
and efficiently but without hurrying.
Each movement was effective and wasted no energy. He had a day’s work to
do and he was pacing himself. He had a
look of calm enthusiasm for the task in hand and for the business of the day
ahead. As he set out his chairs, he was much happier than someone who was asleep
in bed, snoring through their morning.
Seeing this man, I shared his feeling for
the new day. I too felt the privilege of going to work and of being part of the
life of the city. My job was to teach English to as many people as I could.
That was what I did. I was a small cog
in the wheel of city life but even the smallest of cogs matters.
Much of the horror of being unemployed is
having no income at the end of the month. But it is not only that. It is also the
loss of that sense of contributing to the buzz and hum of the life around you.
This is also what makes it so hard for
some people to accept retirement. For
the retired, every day is the weekend.
This sounds a permanent blessing but permanent blessings are sometimes
hard to live with. When you retire there
is no feeling of expectancy when Friday evening arrives. All days are Friday. Every evening is Friday
evening. All too often pensioners are no longer a moving part of city life. They become its furniture. They are invisible
spectators.
They can remedy this of course. They can be busy in many ways and have the
luxury of deciding how to share their time and who to help and when.
On TV here in Mallorca whenever there is
a report on the retired, with some statistic about pensions or the health of
the elderly, the pictures that go with the report always show a group of four
old men playing dominoes in a bar. Why not show some old people doing voluntary
work? Many do. Or show a woman in her seventies
collecting her grandchildren from school or taking up oil painting or learning German
in evening classes? Why always the dominoes?
I once had a nightmare in which I saw a
city in which there was no life on a Monday morning. It was a horrific vision. Not
a soul was in the streets. Every shop was shut and every office was closed.
There must have been a monstrous coincidence by which every single worker had
overslept. Quite simply everyone had forgotten to go to work. It was frightening to walk along the Avenidas which
was void of life. My barman was not
setting out the chairs. Nothing was happening.
No one was having a quick coffee in a bar before rushing off to the
office. There were no friends to greet
as you passed them in the street. ‘I
must run. You see, I’m going to the dentist.’ The dentist would be closed
anyway. Banks were closed, insurance
offices were closed, petrol stations were closed. Everything was closed and nothing
was happening.
How we take for granted the bustle of a
Monday morning or the happy rush of Friday evening! We should appreciate the bar with its door
wide open, the newspaper, produced, printed and distributed and there waiting to
be read. We should be thankful for the cinema ready and wanting to show us a
film. We are lucky to be part of the
rhythm of the city.
So, here’s to the nameless man in the restaurant
setting out his chairs! Here’s to all
who move the city forward day by day! Here’s to all pensioners who are not
playing dominoes in a bar! Here’s to everyone of whatever age who helps to keep
things ticking over normally. Here’s to you all!
PS
I wrote this in December 2018. I now see that those were the good old
days. We were happy and we did not know it. Life was innocent of Covid – 19. That nightmare I had in 2018 has become a
terrible reality now in May, 2020.
Let us hope it will pass. Let’s look forward
to a busy future and let´s make good use of it.
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