oi oi oi
I come from a land down under
Where beer does flow and men chunder
Can't you hear, can't you hear the thunder?
You better run, you better take cover
Men at Work
I read somewhere not long ago that there is a floating population of 2,000 Australians in Paris. I'm not sure if this ethereal figure is correct, but if it is, that's not very many. That's certainly a small enough number to make me exotic.
People hear my accent and they try to be all smartypants and announce:
Vous êtes Anglaise!
Nup
Américaine?
Na ha
D'ou venez vous?
Australie!
Oh you speak German?
No!
And then they get all big-eyed and either say "ha ha kangaroo!" or wax lyrical about how they would like to go there one day, their cousin went there once, or they went there...and they loved it!
And why would I live here when I could live in a beautiful country like
Or they tell me that they have tasted Foster's beer or wine from Jacobs Creek (of course Australians don't take these exported beverages seriously - the good stuff stays at home - what Australia exports is the cheap and nasty stuff that we drank when we were teenagers so we could lose our inhibitions as quickly as possible and have an excuse to grope each other's boyfriends and steal clothes from stranger's clotheslines).
So generally
But with so few Australians in
"They are Australian", I'll whisper to H, pointing to two indistinct blobs in the distance.
"How do you know?"
"I just do!"
I think I have an 83.5% success rate.
It's not their skin colouring or the shape of their eyes because as we all know
Perhaps it's a way of dressing, a way of standing (not quite straight), their demeanour, and dare I be so lame as to say it - a certain openness - "come on in and know me".
But I don't come across that many Australians who actually live here. And with a few exceptions, those that I have met here don't really want to know other Australians. Like I am the bones jangling around in their closet, like I am going to see beneath their cultivated European ways, tear off their Euro veil and reveal their inner aussie bumpkin.
I was a bit like that when I was living in
But I find I've recently started to seek out other Australians in
Of course the guys that happened to be there, although good people who I don't wish any harm,
were the extreme form of Australian, those who drink lots of beer and then chunder, quite expressively and publicly. So one hour was a big enough dose of
But I still do feel a welcome bond with many Australians I meet.
I guess it is nice to be blue-eyed and exotic in
Hmm, very interesting all that. Considering that in Australia I always felt a bit out of place, not sporty enough, a strange dark bookish character sitting up a tree watching everyone else participating in life or sport.
I've always been a sucker for the brooding man from "Europe" (doesn't matter where - any EU member will do) but I found that a couple of years after I moved here I had a turnaround and started being attracted to six foot men full of muscles with broad australian accents and sun-drenched noses. Exotic is indeed relative and ever-changing.
Now that I am nearly as far from
And then there is that not quite pride I have for the country I wanted to ditch forever. Especially now with the World Cup. With football i'm like one of those people who say they are a devout catholic but only go to mass at Christmas and Easter. I say "I love football" but only ever watch it during the World Cup and then forget it exists for four years.
I nearly cried when
So tonight I chose my bar better. I went to the Australian bar near my house (somewhere I thought I would never go). And yes everyone was supporting
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