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Cotswolds

Cotswolds

A Pub with a View

There is a pub in a neighboring village with a view of a green hillside in the middle distance. Every once and a while a white horse drifts onto this hillside from the thickets of trees that serve as the wings for his stage.

Sitting on the back porch of this pub last night the air was cool, wispy clouds were back lit pink against a pale blue sky, and sure enough the horse appeared. Had he sprouted an ivory spiral and disappeared into the sky on an invisible rainbow, I would have only been half-surprised.

England Random

All My Friends Are Over Fifty

It’s the eve of our trip to Boylestone for the annual show where we will stay with two of our dearest friends, B. and R., who happen to be of a mature age. For the past few years I’ve been giving myself a hard time for enjoying hanging out with older folks. I’m not talking geriatrics here, but I am talking retirement age people with grown up kids. The trend has continued in the Cotswolds where all my favourite people are over fifty.

Husband came up with a theory today that is more flattering than my previous conclusion of I must be old before my time. The theory is rather that we’re more discerning, and is based on the observation of a certain joie de vivre in the retired set. Our mature friends have a palpable sense of “you’ve only got one life,” a.k.a. mortality, that manifests in travel and tireless charity work and one more glass of wine (why not?). In no particular order they’ve made and lost fortunes, married and divorced and married again, raised kids, survived cancer, fought wars, seen the world, cavorted with criminals and royalty, are too old to care about being political correct, and know you don’t want to see any pictures of their grandkids. All of which makes for much more interesting conversation than, say, the exorbitant cost of traveling during the school holidays or little Timmy’s acting out in the classroom.

Which brings me to another major factor in our socializing preferences, the fact that we don’t have kids and most people our age do. This means both that we have fewer opportunities—no school runs or parks or parent nights—to meet people our own age, and that the social opportunities we do have can be taxing. We try with our friends with kids, especially the old friends with whom we faithfully do the obligatory semi-annual meal together. But the truth is that no, I don’t really want to dismantle my couch again to play fort with your son while everyone else stands around and watches because, well, there’s no place to sit. I don’t think it’s cute when he upends his plate at the table, nor do I enjoy pushing my now cold food around the plate while you go upstairs to punish him once “cute” turns into a full-fledged tantrum.

I realize I am at risk of sounding unsympathetic towards parents or, worse, anti-kid. The truth is I like kids. I just like them better with seventy or so years of living behind them.

Cotswolds

Meet the Bishop

Religion has been creeping back into my life lately. At JFK on Wednesday night while waiting on a delayed flight I picked up, then put down, then picked up again and finally bought a book called Grace (Eventually): Thoughts on Faith by Anne Lamott. I’ve read and enjoyed other books by her in the past but my hesitation was because this one had “faith” in the title and was filed under Religion. Four days later and I can’t put it down. I had nothing to worry about – she throws Jesus in here and there but she also says “fuck”, binges on apple fritters and could hold her own in a sarcasm duel with David Sedaris. Hot on the heels of the John Edwards scandal (this hasn’t made the UK press – I only picked it up when I was watching the news on the screen in the back of a NYC cab and momentarily wondered if I was watching spoof TV), I am glad America has a positive face for liberal Christianity in Anne Lamott.

Religion has been present in my life more often than not although I don’t consider myself particularly religious—at most a cultural Christian. Both husband and I were lured to church by our mothers in childhood, him to C of E, me to Presbyterian. Mine used breakfast at Mister Donut as the bribe. In my early teens my girlfriend and I attended church youth group to guarantee our spot in an annual ski trip to North Carolina and because there were boys. Then I went through an odd couple of evangelical-ish years in high school courtesy of the Fellowship of Christian Athletes. My mother and lapsed-Catholic father didn’t seem to notice my new found interest in the Bible and generally being a judgmental prat. I guess when you’re the parents of a teenager you can imagine worse things and choose your battles.

And then there was a dry spell until husband and I started attending a zen center in Los Angeles—one of those things, like therapy, that seems much more plausible in L.A. Back in England we went through another dry spell until the Cotswolds. I’m not sure how to explain the return to the fold except that church in a small rural area is a much more natural extension of daily life than it seems in urban places. It has something to do with the beauty of nature all around you all the time, and the history and beauty of the churches themselves, some from Saxon times, doesn’t hurt.

This morning husband and I went to church in our Cotswold town. My only complaint about C of E is that there isn’t much spare time for contemplation. You’re up and down and regimented to the minute by that little pamphlet telling you what to do next. But whether sitting zazen or reciting the Apostles Creed, monkey mind can still get you. No discipline seems to have figured that out as I proved today when I found myself thinking about a Jack Nicholson movie in the middle of a hymn. Oh, and hymns are definitely better than chanting, especially for someone tone deaf like me. It’s my only safe haven to let it rip since husband has forbidden me from singing along in the car.

After church today a man bounded over to introduce himself. I’ve noticed this happens a lot in church. People are friendly, which is still startling after a few years in London. He was dressed casually in a striped shirt, pullover sweater, pants and sandals. We chatted about Liverpool where he lives—he was on holiday in the Cotswolds—and where husband grew up. The Anglican Cathedral around the corner from where husband once lived? Yes, he knew it well. After more questions about us, during which husband managed to drop in a few “hells,” I asked him what he did in my best my best polite, inquisitive church voice.

“I’m the bishop of Liverpool,” he replied.

Cotswolds

Virgin of the Seasons

Now that the Cotswold landscape has turned the same bleached wheat and pale green of the stone houses, I assumed the flora and fauna surprises of the spring and early summer had passed. The oil of rapeseed that smeared the landscape violent yellow in May has long since faded and is being plucked from the ground. Giant swiss rolls of hay sit patiently in a field alongside a displaced flock of seagulls.

But amongst the grand dame’s decline into fall there are still small pleasures. On jogs this weekend along the back lanes I stopped to admire a Venetian glass ornament masquerading as a kind of thistle: a sparkly crystal ball crowned by a smaller fuschia bulb. Another splash of hot pink came in cones of spikes and flowers at the end of tall stalked shrubs. I do not know their names, but I’ve already asked for a book of flowers and birds for Christmas, the latter because the birds have finally discovered the feeder husband has filled with monkey nuts in the back garden.

Since I only come to the Cotswolds on weekends, the changes in the landscape from week to week appear more pronounced to me, like a grandparent who only gets to see her grandchild infrequently and therefore notices subtle differences a parent might not. Or closer to home, like a mother who only sees her transatlantic daughter once or twice a year and therefore immediately notices and comments upon any weight gain in the interval passed (said mother having already cleared the facelift milestone, a weight watchers devotee, and driver of a red Lexus convertible – once a Californian, always a Californian).

These changes are most pronounced in spring. After snow drops, daffodils, and tulips (rather pedestrian Hyde Park fare I now say with haughty hindsight), the fun kicks in. The mature elegance of horse chestnuts is upstaged by the cottony bluster of May blossom lining the roads. Fields polka dotted with poppy reds cheered me up just as I was mourning the receding tidal wave of oil of rapeseed yellow. Then in June the green that defines green all around.

Here in the Cotswolds are the seasons not populated in my previous lives in swamp or desert, South Florida and L.A. landscapes differentiated only by palm tree variety (coconut, royal, date) and humidity levels. And not just seasons, but an entire landscape from my childhood storybook-fuelled imagination. Eeyore’s thistles were absent amongst hibiscus and limes, but here line the country lanes. Bulbous, furry bumble bees inform my long past dance recital to “Flight of the Bumble Bee” – apparently what I knew as a bee is reviled as a wasp in England. Wind blows in the willows along the River Leach, and last week I found Hansel and Gretel in the scallop-edged stone houses of the Lake District. Even the train station from where I leave London for the Cotswolds on a Friday evening is the namesake of a storied bear.

England

Rural Life – Zeitgeist of the Noughties

Back in London walking up Kensington Church Street today I noticed a shiny new addition to the musty antiques stores, the Chegworth Farm Shop. I know Chegworth from their fruit stand at the Saturday morning Notting Hill Farmers Market in the parking lot just behind. It seems they decided to go for a more permanent foothold in this posh London neighborhood. They are not the first to figure out the urban lust for the simple life – Daylesford Organic in Harvey Nicks precedes them (I’ll save the Daylesford Organic in the real village of Daylesford in the Cotswolds for another blog or two).

At the risk of going all “Al Gore, I invented the Internet” on your ass, husband and I do think we were a bit bleeding edge with our escape to the country. It’s admittedly a bit paltry, but husband cites evidence in the fashion press: Paul Smith went flat caps and tweeds this spring; The Artic Monkeys donned the same at the Brits back in Feb., even if it was in jest. Husband also notes with pride he purchased tweeds and a flat cap from a gentleman’s shop in Cirencester way back in 2007. Paul Smith is apparently for posers

I personally think the country zeitgeist is all about the current nasties of the world: war in Iraq, credit crunch, property bust (shall I stop now?). Organic veg and designer wellies are a welcome retreat.

Cotswolds

I Saw You Coming

Today is the one-year anniversary of the Gloucestershire floods that devastated a large part of the Cotswolds last summer.

By this time last year we were actively looking for our Cotswolds cottage, working with several local estate agents. On the morning after the flooding I called one of them to arrange a viewing and was highly irritated by getting an answering machine during business hours. I was to expect this sort of unprofessionalism when dealing with “rural folk” was the chastening I got from husband.

Little did our superior urbanite selves realize that the estate agent’s office was completely flooded. Bourton on the Water was now known as Bourton Under Water. And yes, the estate agent informed me when she returned my call mid-week, the lovely little cottage we had seen the previous week had also fallen victim.

When we were let into the cottage a few weeks later for a second viewing, the ground floor was in disarray. Industrial drying fans rumbled on bare concrete where flooring, damaged beyond repair, had been ripped away. We were still smitten, proving the adage that house purchases are emotional. Using the perverse logic that most married woman have resorted to at some point, I even saw the bright side of the flooding: there wouldn’t be any arguments with husband over replacing the industrial beige carpet and wood effect vinyl flooring – what would have been “perfectly good” floor coverings to him. (I realize how incredibly petty it is that I had this thought in the midst of devastation that is still wreaking havoc on so many people’s lives. I’m not proud, but at least I’m honest).

We made an offer on that visit. The owners probably couldn’t believe their luck so soon after the floods. Then again, they probably saw us coming.

Cotswolds

Dorothy, Jean, and Mrs Moneypenny

On Saturday we went to the summer fete in the village where we first rented a cottage in the Cotswolds. Dorothy was on duty collecting the £1 entrance fee. She’s getting a bit forgetful (she tried to get me to pay twice!) but she can still add up your bill in her head when you buy supplies from her at the village shop she runs most days. Jean was also there, busy judging the various dog classes, my favourite of which was “dog with the waggiest tail.” There were way more ribbons on offer than dogs in the village.

On Sunday we went back to the village for church. Jean was on duty again, this time as a lay minister leading matins. Dorothy was there too and led a prayer that covered victims of friendly fire in Afghanistan, knife crime in London, and, of course, the Queen (“an inspiration”).

These two older ladies (Dorothy is 80, Jean 60+) make up over twenty percent of the normal Sunday congregation in addition to their myriad of other civic duties. It makes me wonder what will happen when they are gone. There is the younger Chris, who is the local post-mistress (until her post office closes later this summer and she becomes solely a shop-mistress) and was on duty at the fete dispensing tea and cakes.

Another country lady who caught my attention this week was Mrs. Moneypenny, a columnist in the Weekend FT. Her Sunday piece was essentially a retelling of an evening at a country house where Mrs. Moneypenny got very pissed and passed out on the bathroom floor – not what I’d expect to read from a very successful businesswoman with three kids (her cost centres as she calls them) and a husband, although I was highly amused. After three years away from the puritanical bonds of the United States, I am still taken aback at the friendly ease with which tales of excess are thrown about the workplace, or the national media in this case. I remember when I used to do quaint things like hide the fact that I was hungover from my boss.

Cotswolds

Wife in the Cotswolds

It doesn’t have the same ring as “Wife in the North.” The Cotswolds is way too cushy, hardly Northumberland, the north of “Wife in the…” But what finally motivated me to start this blog was an article I read about this Wife in the North in the Sunday paper that was still in the Chedworth pub we frequent for Monday night dinners. Lucky for me husband was in a sulky mood last Monday night leaving me nothing better to do than pick up a day-old paper.

Anyway, this Wife in the North was basically dragged out of London pregnant and with two other children in tow so that her husband could pursue his dream of living in his spiritual home of Northumberland, giving her loads to blog about. My story about life in the Cotswolds is a little different but I’ve been writing it down with various levels of consistency for the past 6 months in a lonely little Word document on this laptop. Time to blog it and hope the vary nature of a blog will help me become a more disciplined chronicler.

Cotswolds

Rule Number 1: Remain an Enigma

Looking back on it, my experience at that English wedding in France eight years ago was my first lesson in the power of the enigma in British society. Confronted with a mass of Jimmy Choos discarded and languishing poolside, I felt as inadequate as my outlet mall dress. And yet there was an interest in me that was disproportionate to my to dazzling personality and clothing budget. It was fuelled undoubtedly by the polite upbringing of the guests, but also by the fact that I was from L.A.

Husband had benefited from this in reverse as a Brit in L.A., not least in nabbing me. I admit to the “every Englishman is Hugh Grant” perception I had back when we first met. Imagine my surprise when I arrived in England and learned that Liverpudlians are best known for, well, stealing things (The Beatles aside). There was also an education to be had in the great North / South divide in England. It’s the reverse of the San Fran / L.A. thing, with the South self-proclaiming their cultural and economic superiority.

In the Cotswolds, my American-ness has been a benefit to both husband and me. Despite the rap the states have taken on the global stage, it’s rare enough for an American to take up residence in the Cotswolds that it generates friendly curiosity. Husband in other circumstances could have been a walking target in our rural idyll—a scouse, urban lamb amongst the posh, country lions. Twelve years in L.A. and an American wife threw him a lifeline, even if he still subject to occasional good natured chiding.

Our friend, B., confirms the foreign spouse halo-effect has been active for generations now. He was raised in a Liverpool pub by a single mother and achieved fame as a cartoonist. His success afforded him access to a new, privileged social circle who didn’t know quite what to make of him. The toffs knew what to make of an artist—in fact the word toff once denoted a generous benefactor. But a cartoonist? B. credits his Neapolitan wife for providing the touch of foreign mystique required to throw a social set stifled by their own class pre-conceptions into accepting disarray.

As B. found, the beauty of being an outsider (or by association in husband’s case) in the Cotswolds has been the distancing effect from the rigors of British social strata definition. There is, however, an art to maintaining the enigma, especially when there are so many traps to fall into: where you drink, what paper you take, football or rugby (cricket is assumed).

The venue in which you choose to drink in our Cotswold town says a lot about you, and I’ve therefore decided the best policy is to drink in them all. While I favour the wine bar, I can also choose from a biker friendly, half-timbered pub; a traditional if occasionally tourist pub; an upscale coaching inn; or a concrete block establishment grandly known as the sports and social club, which is convenient when taking in a summer cricket match on the adjoining field.

Papers are trickier. They’re collected from the local bakery, so your selection is subject to public exposure. This is Telegraph and Times country although the bakery stocks a few token Guardians. Thankfully my choice, the FT Weekend, is ideologically vague. It has a whiff of city banker about it, and no one needs to know that I buy it for the Life and Arts section.

On the matter of football (soccer) vs rugby, I’ll start with a saying R. the barman taught me not long after we first moved in: “Rugby is a hooligan’s game played by gentlemen whereas soccer is a gentleman’s game played by hooligans.” I probably don’t need to say the Cotswolds are in the rugby camp. Husband is, however, from Liverpool, home of a legendary football team, and my loyalty remains with the hooligans.

Cotswolds

Toff Scruffiness

I was first introduced to the principle of toff scruffiness in 2000 when I attended a summer wedding of an old London friend of husband’s in the Midi-Pyrénées. The women wore frocks I recognised from the racks of Fred Segal in L.A. where I browsed but never bought. Sunglasses and Gucci sandals with suits were the order of the day for the men. Amongst this finery, one man stood out in ratty canvas deck shoes. Husband explained he was the richest man there.

Yesterday at the town fair I encountered another excellent example. After meandering around the amusements in the market square, we stepped into the wine bar to say hello to the usual suspects. Upon chiding one of them for wearing a woolie jumper in the middle of summer I was told, “but dear, I must wear it to cover the holes in the elbows of my shirt.”