It seems like only yesterday that I left Croydon with a suitcase, a
certificate of good health signed by Doctor Brightwell, cards wishing me luck
from my lively and loving Sussex University friends, a diploma from
International House which supposedly equipped me to teach English as a foreign
language, an adventurous spirit and a trusting heart. But in fact it was last
century, October 1981.
I arrived in Greece after the sun had set, made my way in the darkness
over 200 kilometres
north of Athens by dimly lit bus and arrived at a dingy brown hotel in the
middle of the night. It seemed like a miracle when I told the hotel
receptionist my name and she not only found my name on the hotel register but
told me that Mr Mavrikas was expecting me at his school at ten the following
morning. I remember nothing of the hotel room but for its browness, stillness
and strangeness. I slept with the confidence of a girl starting an adventure.
I awoke to Lamia and a morning flooded with light, people, welcome, new
beginnings and loud speakers on every street corner, every car, every square,
blaring out election campaigns and songs.
During those first confusing days, people were always telling me that
‘It’s not normally like this here.’ Andreas Papandreou, the socialist PASOK
party candidate was standing for the first time as Prime Minister after
centuries of foreign oppression, junta rule and conservative government, and
emotions and hopes were running high. They meant, I suppose, that it wasn’t
normally that noisy, that chaotic, that enthusiastic. Well, they were trying to
be nice and save me from a little culture shock, I suppose. Because really, bar
the loud speakers, Greece is like that every single day. People were cycling
around the town, cars were hooting, the marble squares glared white in the
early autumn light and I had an address on a scrap of paper where I was to meet
one of my employers. Of course I couldn't read the street names and didn't have
a town map. So naturally I ignored everything I had ever been taught and
flagged down a passing truck. I showed the driver my scrap of paper and climbed
into the front passenger seat next to him. Was I foolish? Was he trustworthy?
Whatever. He took me to the school, wished me a good morning and left me. I was
twenty five, wearing bright pink, tight jeans, foreign and vulnerable and I was
safely delivered.
2 comments:
I hope we are going to get the next installment!!
Thanks, Janet. I'm afraid you probably are :)
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