Alex Grech's blog

Saturday, July 30, 2005

44



Tomorrow, 31st July, in about 30 minutes, I will be 44.

Bob Hope once famously said that middle age is when you start to show your age around your middle.

To celebrate official middle age, I have compiled my 44 list. The 44 things I have learnt in 44 years of life.

There’s no order in the numbering, no point to be made. Other than to establish a sense of order that tends to be absent in my real life.

44 Lessons

1. 23 is a good age to break free from your roots. At 23, I ran away to London, just as people in Malta started to believe that tear-gas and police beatings were something to be managed in the daily course of life. I gravitated from a dump in Holloway to a flatlet in Upper Street Islington to a garden flat in Willesden which was up and coming but never quite came to leafy Buckinghamshire with the smell of wood smoke. Anybody aged 23 in Malta should pack and go and get a taste for something larger. And acquire some degree of perspective and humility.

2. I do not go for stereotypes in women, as evidenced by two marriages to beautiful, intelligent, foreign and remarkable women. The first - a small, curvy brunette, full of Greek passion, an artist, aromatherapist, aspiring singer, shopaholic maniac non–stop chatter box; the second - tall, lean, blonde, cool Britannia, gardener, writer, perfectionist, industrious DIY expert. I seduced both with words - money and good looks not being readily-available at the time. Both eventually took pity and cooked him beautiful meals.

3. Kids don’t make sense until you make your own. When you do, you realise they’re just like you. I have contributed to the creation of a beautiful child. Sometimes, I can remember exactly the night it happened. Sometimes, I wonder how it happened.

4. Football is poetry. At the age of 12, I scored a hat-trick in 10 minutes on the De La Salle football track, reserved for the more marginalised of footballers. When I scored the third goal and turned to celebrate, my ankle caught the edge of the boulder cum goalpost, and my ankle ballooned on impact. For a moment, with the adrenalin rush, I felt no pain.

5. Football is cruelty. AC Milan v Liverpool, Champions League, Istanbul. A six minute sequence that still sends shivers down my crooked spine.

6. Mentors tend to arrive in the early years. My mentor was my cousin Mario, now a Professor of Economics at Pretoria University. Mario shaved his head when everyone had perms, introduced me to dangerous books, alternative religions, women with bangles and hairy armpits, Jim Morrison, Wagner, Talking Heads and a bunch of fellow badly-shaven dropouts. He also housed me when I ran away from home at 17, for all of six weeks. All the way from San Gwann to Mosta. I have never been a mentor to anyone.

7. Theatre is a home for dreamers, exhibitionists and misfits. I have done some theatre work he is proud of. At least, it proved you can be shy and still beat your fears by doing what you fear most. Standing above another’s head.

8. Blood can run thicker than water. I am proud of my siblings. Especially of my 28 year-old brother Shaun, a pure, idealistic, talented guitarist, artist and semi-permanent student. Shaun always sees through me.

9. Beauty is all about the senses. The sound of the sea at Ghajn Tuffieha as you gently fall sleep on the stomach of someone you love. Your child’s first cry. The smell of the nape of your lover’s neck. The smell of freshly ground coffee. A swim under moonlight. The first time you touched. The cliché’s all work because they are the result of millennia of passion and sensuality and humanity.

10. The best way of seeing Rome is on the back of a lambretta, preferably holding on to a girl in a mini-skirt called Francesca.

11. There’s a lifetime to worry about things you can do nothing about: love-handles, lovelessness, receding hairlines, lost careers, cancer, loss, scoliosis, getting older, not making it to NYC with Jacob, women walking by and looking through you, cars to replace, bills to pay, years rolling by, Malta going to the dogs, the unbearable lightness of being.

12. Nothing much good ever comes out of nostalgia. Especially nostalgia for an imaginary island. Or as Bennato used to croon… ‘l’isola che non c’e’. All those migrants out there, in grey weather, thinking of sparkling blue sea and bobz biz-zejt, please take note.

13. When people are cornered, they are capable of the vilest of acts. In Malta, the cocktail party system inevitably closes ranks to protect its own.

14. Small places breed small minds. Living on a small island requires a thick skin, a sense of humour and a boat.

15. Paid work, in many cases, brings out the worst in people. You always have to serve someone…Bob Dylan got that one right.

16. Young women and older men will always be chemically attracted to each other.

17. Nothing beats the company of a beautiful, intelligent woman for an evening. Assuming you are a male heterosexual.

18. When in doubt, travel. Despite the Maltese Government’s best efforts to stifle any inclination in its citizens to do so. Treat the departure taxes with contempt.

19. A quick introduction to Maltese environmental values should start with a visit to any street to watch a Maltese housewife wash the front door of her house. Sneak a look at the spick and span of the house behind her. Watch her sweep the dirty water down the road, for it to nest in front of a neighbour’s door.

20. Women are as treacherous as men in sex and love. They just know how to dispense their treachery silently, with a smile and superior style.

21. Old friends get old. Old friends get to be part of the system, write letters in the papers, take fewer risks, tell me to keep my mouth shut. Sometimes you need new friends.

22. Time takes its toll on any relationship, no matter how beautiful, intense and well meaning. The difficulty is to acknowledge this, and learn how to manage expectations after the realisation. And grasp the moments.

23. The Maltese hate returned migrants almost as much as they hate illegal ones.

24. You can’t always get what you want. I still struggle to accept this. It doesn’t help that most times I don't know what I want.

25. It is possible, for a period of time, to love more than one person at the same time. There is always a price to pay for addictive relationships. They are also the ones most likely to remember on one’s deathbed.

26. A little rage is good, sometimes. A little rage all the time is bad for the heart, and the people you live with.

27. Shiny happy people are not always happy. Silent, sullen types are not always depressed.

28. The Internet has saved lives and broken others. Like all brilliant inventions, it needs to be treated with respect.

29. It is never too late unless you persuade yourself it is. Or someone has died.

30. Short skirts are dangerous, if worn by women who understand the danger.

31. A little alcohol can do wonders to free your tongue in conversation with strangers.

32. Contact lenses were one of the most significant inventions of the 20th century.

33. We are always scared. We come to this world alone, we leave it alone. In the interim, we make a little heat between the sky and the earth.

34. Men are as vain and complicated as women.

35. The liars, cheats, and cads do get away with it. All that stuff we learn at school and teach our children does not prepare us for the real world.

36. Music, good music, can still reach your darkest soul. Whether it is Rufus Wainwright on your iPod or a Peter Gabriel concert.

37. Greed is all around us. The unhappiest people I have met were millionaires. They were certainly not the most talented. They were always the ones who counted their pennies.

38. You are going to die. Every other fear should pale into insignificance.

39. Religions have a lot to answer for.

40. Chartered Accountants are rarely sexy people.

41. At 44, you realise there are things you wanted to do at 23 which you may never be able to do. If you still can, go out and do them. Now. Unless you don’t want to do them any more.

42. As you get older, birthdays become sources of some mirth.

43. At the end of the day, you just have to do it (with apologies to Nike).

44. At 44, you realise you know nothing. And that it is time to start to learn something.

This is it.

12 comments:

Anonymous said...

Although I said 'don't take it as definitive', I liked the 44 things, as a road map to you.

So many things to say, I will, on one of these 365 days that make your 44th, comment on the similarities and on the 180º point of view apart.

I specially enjoyed # 9. Senses, smell and touch. I cherish that. I was going to tell you to buy or smell a new parfum for this year, but you've got it figured out.

My father used to go to Malta and send me postcards. One of his best friend was the Brazilian ambassador in Malta. Ages ago. That guy used to pick me up and take me to a window to see the moon, a fascination I still have.

Thanks for reminding me of the moon and Malta and birthdays.
And life.

Felice compleanno.

Unknown said...

Happy birthday!

Roderick Mallia said...

Amen.

Happy birthday Max.

Alex said...

Silvia... yes, we have 365 days within which to share life notes and explore the 180 degrees... You're right. It always comes down to the senses, in the end... our human blueprint.


Rupert u Roderick. Grazzi, minn qalbi.

Arcibald said...

Ili ma narah ftit lil Shaun - għamilna żmien 'naħdmu' fl-istess kamra mudlama. Ħasra li telaqlu l-entużjażmu li kellu fil-bidu meta għaqqad Syrup mkII. Insomma sellili (u awguri f'għeluq sninek).

MaltaGirl said...

Happy birthday, Max :-)

Fausto Majistral said...

Happy birthday.

I once met your cousin Mario. He's truly a remarkable guy.

Are you sure mentors only show up in the early years? Is there no more hope?

Alex said...

Antonio, grazzi tax-xewqat - Shaun kien qalli bik izda ma kontx ghadni sibt 'il blog tieghek. 'il Shaun rajtu llum - anki jien nixtieq li jerga' jibda jdoqq, imma bhalissa ntefa' jistudja full time ghax irid jispicaa l-Masters u jsalpa 'l hemm. Nispera li jerga' jaqbad 'il-kitarra.

Maltagirl.. thank you for the birthday wishes.

Fausto - yes, Mario is one of a kind. I think he worked and slept in the same parka for years in the seventies. His dress sense has improved these days - he's a senior advisor to the South African government - he may be visiting Malta early next year. But.. no, from my experience,as you get older, mentors become remarkably absent and you basically have to dig in and move forward on your own steam. Then again... all I know is what I know till now...

Mark Vella said...

Happy birthday, Max.

Great post to start the week..gives us all hope

Alex said...

Thanks Mark. A quiet one, in the end.

Monday now beckons. And I was born on a Monday. Go figure...

Anonymous said...

In this past week i have forgotten my brothers birthday, my parents wedding anniversary and your birthday. Terrible. I generally forget my own birthday though. It's not denial. I think it's just not having a sense of occasion.

task#3 Happy Birthday!

I hope i have gone some way to making amends on all counts.

item #45 for your list should you agree. It's never ever too late. It's just harder and more awkward. heed #43.

Alex said...

Ju

Apologies accepted - you're in good company, as it happens.

I'll take item 45, as long as it's accompanied by the same bout of insanity, energy and spirit of adventure you have when you are 23.

I think it's still there. Most days.