Today I gave three ladies a lift. The sky was bruising, dark, with lightning snaking in the south, thunder shaking the earth right across the Gauteng. I’d been in a shopping mall, in a supermarket with maddeningly flickering lights, you know those fluorescents that set off epileptic fits? Shopping for my mother’s 80th birthday proved a lengthy process, just finding the right ingredients for the cake, then the wine, the birthday cake candles, the cream cheese, the lollies. Mostly quite foreign to me, the placement of items according to some other logic. The whole supermarket landscape annoyingly unfamiliar, I didn’t want to hang around, browsing, so impatient and efficient am I, in my Western way.
I’d been previously irritated by having to walk a long way to the bank, and then with a tedious, repetitive half hour conversation at my hateful airtime/data provider, Vodaphone. Driving home I took photographs of the sky to the south, the cold functional landscape, giving the finger to any aesthetic, no heed for the eye’s connection to the soul. Only highways, construction, showrooms, advertising; vulgar, shamelessly self serving, adding nothing to the environment but a blurting call, void of care what anyone may think, of the impact on the senses.
Like the beggars who push themselves into your space, the theatre at the traffic lights or on certain streets. The young man who stood within a meter of a man and I who were about to melt into a passionate 11.50pm kiss on a street of cafes and bars, all wildly alive and drunk. The young man inserted himself into our passion, insistent that we support his cause, give him money. Beyond chutzpah, the only way we could shake him was to pace down the street and swerve into a nightclub. It was a stupendous act of carelessness, a kiss I’d been waiting for for months. He got no money from me.
Gauteng’s streets are alive with sales – mostly stuff you really don’t need, mobile phone chargers, sunglasses, superglue, feather dusters. Rarely do the traffic light vendors take no for an answer; today one did. He had unusual wares, looked like he was from the north east of Africa, rosaries draped from his left arm, while his right proffered pumice stones. I regretted not buying a stone, purely because he conversed with me and didn’t pull out his performance to guilt me into giving him money.
I was feeling bleak on the drive home, grumpy, as if grit was lining my veins and I had suddenly reached my limit in the aesthetic vacuum of Gauteng. How considerate Australian society is, or is that just law abiding? I find myself wanting to instigate campaigns against people who put their little advertising boards up on the few remaining unspoilt country roads, grumpy, an old woman I am becoming.
As the thunder shook out a dark dome over all of our heads, I turned onto Nelmapius Road, which runs along the border of the Centurion Golf and Country Estate, one of many security/golf villages, which people seem to like. A genteel country existence encircled by razor wire, electric fence and Africans paid to secure the perimeters. Depressing. To me, anyway.
Grumbling to myself, aware that I needed to police my own thinking, that too much of a good time on the weekend left me depleted, wakening to the sadness of another vacuum, my friends in Australia, who embody love, kindness, acceptance, empathy, for whom I don’t have to perform, adjust myself or watch my tongue. My friends who love me regardless. It’s hard work here – and I seem to attract self absorbed people, narcissists (who probably reflect my self absorption ....) Currently, there are a few of them, whom I can spend a few hours with and who will not enquire how I am doing, in this big transition. Its all action: what needs to be done, what has been done, business, home improvements, furniture purchases, complaints, dull, dull conversation that could be knocked off in seven minutes but takes an hour. I know I don’t divulge too readily, as I am cautious, particularly around new friends. What I am used to is a deep empathic holding from my circle, a gentle availability to hear me, each other.
A recent new friendship here is a caricature embodiment of the masculine – although its not that amusing to inhabit the dynamic – he senses I am triggered by something, demands I immediately disclose what is going on, and then moves straight into either repair mode, “what have I done wrong now?”/martyr mode, or straightforward ultimatum mode. Zero empathy. Its like exposure therapy, where you re-experience the stimulus of the trauma over and over until you don’t react. Shock therapy. God knows what I have been doing in that relationship. Some kind of resilience experiment, I imagine.
A recent new friendship here is a caricature embodiment of the masculine – although its not that amusing to inhabit the dynamic – he senses I am triggered by something, demands I immediately disclose what is going on, and then moves straight into either repair mode, “what have I done wrong now?”/martyr mode, or straightforward ultimatum mode. Zero empathy. Its like exposure therapy, where you re-experience the stimulus of the trauma over and over until you don’t react. Shock therapy. God knows what I have been doing in that relationship. Some kind of resilience experiment, I imagine.
But I digress, with my somewhat emaciated relational life, enough of that. Let me tell you about the ladies I gave a lift to, the one whose proud face is beautifully burned into my memory. There is no really interesting story to tell, aside from the broiling threat of a storm stretching from beneath the earth and above our heavens. Simply that I turned into Nelmapius, and pulled up in front of two ladies who I guessed would be walking to the station, some 30-40minutes walk away. There are no taxis on this route, and there are always pedestrians, such a wasted business opportunity, such a wasted civilian opportunity to help each other. These ladies were my age, and had been working in Irene Estate, happy for the lift. We stopped halfway down the road to pick up an older lady who got in laughing and greeted us in Sesotho, and there was much chatter, which I liked, instead of shy, deferential silence. I chatted to the lady next to me, a beautiful upright woman with an open radiant face, her green headscarf framing this exquisite countenance.
“Hopefully you won’t have long to wait for your train,” I said. “Maybe three hours,” she said, and my bile rose again, how these people are held hostage by the transport authorities. What a bunch of bullshit, I just can’t tolerate this lack of protest from the commuters and the lack of integrity from the providers, including the taxi mafia.
The ladies live in Tembisa; the one with the headscarf inquired as to where I am staying, and I said up the road with my mum, and that I have been living overseas. “Ha,” she said, beaming into me, “people from here never offer us lifts, only from overseas.” She was beaming love into me, gratitude and respect from a very radiant, upright place, for such a small gesture as a lift. It makes me want to drive up and down that road giving people lifts so I can chat to them, find out who they are and where they live.
Ordinary people, but people inhabiting and rooted in this place.
This weekend just passed, I went to a rather fabulous braai which had a different group of people, exotic, with a whole other sense of entitlement, but the most charming manners. An American friend was having his housewarming in the posh northern suburbs. I’d helped him select furniture for the big empty spaces, and prepare the food for an unknown number of people. What a glorious assortment arrived: quite a few African Americans, one delightful lawyer from New York who said she’d done so many African studies that she eventually thought, lets just GO to Africa! Another born in Liberia and raised in the US, an exquisite Rwandan woman married to a handsome American man, a magnificent Egyptian woman, a polite man from Cote d’Ivoire who can’t figure out why South African s don’t travel much. An assortment of South Africans bearing Jozi passports, all of us citizens of Jozi, zero’d in from Mafikeng, KZN, East Rand, Cape Town, Pretoria, UK. All of us at home in this glorious city, dancing to the fabulous beats of the DJ under a clear night sky, laughing, singing along, dancing sexy, drinking, making fun. Every now and then my heart would surge up and spray out to existence how grateful I am to be home, how delicious it is to be in this exciting metropolis, in the arms of my dirty old lover, how loved I feel to be simply on the earth that gave me birth. Weaving with the people who now call this place home, winding around them, every now and then a physical connection, a lovely embrace of our human flesh, alive in Africa.
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