We've been travelling in the last couple of weeks. It'll take me time to digest what we've done and who we met and what we saw, but suffice to say that it has made coming back to Switzerland all the harder yet again. For nearly 25 years, I've had to come back here after every holiday. I suspect that it won't be too long until I simply refuse to get on the plane home.
MATRONALIA
Monday, 13 April 2015
Friday, 2 January 2015
Tuesday, 30 October 2012
In the last two weeks I have been ruminating on the use of social media. We have all seen the effects of social media (especially Facebook and Twitter) on the Arab Spring revolutions of 2011. In the last few weeks I have been travelling in North Africa and the Middle East (from Egypt to Turkey - no, not Syria) with my family and one thing that even my teenager noticed and commented upon is that in all the places we visited (from Cairo, to Jerusalem, to rural Turkey) WiFi is seen as a free benefit to customers in shops, cafes, restaurants and hotels. I have not visited the United States for a number of years but here in central Europe you rarely find free Internet access and it is not expected.
I remember a time of no Internet - heck, I remember a time of only black and white TV and just 2 channels in the United Kingdom - but my 14 year old does not remember a time of isolation from Net access. We travel quite a bit within Europe and have become used to paying for access wherever we are (unless I can be persuaded to enter a McDonalds). Therefore, it was a surprise to find ourselves bombarded by free WiFi and Twitter hashtags in what we thought would be isolated non-media aware places.
We were wrong. At times, it seemed that Switzerland - our country of residence and recently announced richest country in the world per capita - was the backward one, when it comes to mass media communication.
Friday, 24 August 2012
Tuesday, 14 August 2012
I have been
ruminating on identity recently. The Olympics will do that to you. An Olympics
held in your home nation brings it home even more.
I left the
UK, with a skip in my step, almost 25 years ago. I had always felt that my life
would not be made there and I was eager to move on. Two years in Iceland,
followed by over two decades in Switzerland and France has seen me remain a
Brit. English is still my main language for living, working, socializing. I
still keep teabags in my kitchen cupboard and I still eat baked beans on toast
for dinner (Heinz, of course). In a contracting world, my half-American child,
born and raised in central Europe, has been brought up on Doctor Who and Blue
Peter. She’s stood in the Blue Peter Garden at the old BBC TV Centre in London,
and had her photograph taken with a beefeater at the Tower of London. She’s got
a kilt made from our official tartan and she yells for Team GB in sporting
events. It is a much smaller world than the one I grew up in.
Next year,
my daughter (solely Swiss and French raised) is going to school in northern
England. She will be nearly 16 and she says she’s going ‘home’ to school. Does
this mean I failed? Did I fail to really leave my mother country when I left? I
know my lack of decent language ability has hindered my ability to fully
integrate in the countries I have lived in, not helped by marrying a fellow
Anglophone (although not the same nationality), and working in a Anglophone
environment (does it count that it is the United Nations and, therefore, a
kaleidoscope of nationalities?).
I love the countries I live in. Switzerland has become home. I have lived in Switzerland longer than any other country in my adult life and soon longer than any other country ever – including the one I was born in. France has become my destination of choice – the first few years after leaving the UK (still single) I would rush ‘home’ to the UK for Christmas and any holiday time available – now we go once a year because we feel we have to. Well, the part of the UK I was born in, where family still live. We travel around the UK as tourists – me included: I fumble with the unfamiliar money and question the validity of new coins that didn’t exist when I lived there; I forget what size clothes and shoes we all take when converted; I forget that HP sauce is called ‘brown sauce’.
I love the countries I live in. Switzerland has become home. I have lived in Switzerland longer than any other country in my adult life and soon longer than any other country ever – including the one I was born in. France has become my destination of choice – the first few years after leaving the UK (still single) I would rush ‘home’ to the UK for Christmas and any holiday time available – now we go once a year because we feel we have to. Well, the part of the UK I was born in, where family still live. We travel around the UK as tourists – me included: I fumble with the unfamiliar money and question the validity of new coins that didn’t exist when I lived there; I forget what size clothes and shoes we all take when converted; I forget that HP sauce is called ‘brown sauce’.
My daughter reminds me that just because everyone there speaks English it does not mean they all want to talk to me, so don’t start conversations, Mum, everywhere we go. But I do. I talk to everyone. And they talk to me. It seems that I am trying to reconnect with my Britishness. Or am I just desperate to communicate with those who understand my humour and my accent and the cultural awareness that can only be ingrained? It is all of those things and more.
When you no
longer live in your homeland, national identity becomes something thrust onto
you, whether you like it or not. When I would move between regions and cities
in the UK, people’s first thought would be ‘Ah, she’s northern’. Now, I am
always ‘Ah, she’s British’. I live in possibly the most diverse cultural and
linguistic environment globally. I am now used to introducing my family as ‘Hi,
I’m Jenny and I’m British, from the north. This is my husband and he is
American, from the Pacific North West, and this is our daughter, born here in
Switzerland’. This is how every family I know introduces themselves. I had no
idea that this had become indoctrinated in me so quickly until I visited a
friend in England a few years after moving to the Geneva area. She told me
about her new boyfriend. My first question was not his name, his age, his
occupation. It was which nationality? She stared at me for what seemed like
ages and just said ‘British. What else would he be?’.
While so
many aspects of daily life are becoming homogenized, it seems that national
identity is still an integral part of understanding our place in the world. The
London 2012 Olympics have demonstrated that to me in ways I thought I’d left
behind me 20 years ago. That my non-UK resident child also identifies with her
Britishness is perhaps more surprising. But for one more time in this Olympic
month, I will shout loud and proud – GO TEAM GB!
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