Italian [And Adjacent States] Dispatch No. 2 – Rhapsody In Grey

24
13

I KEEP REJUVENATING my fellow travellers. Looking through their grey hair and sagging flesh for the younger men and women they used to be – back in the 1960s and 70s. I do the same, now, in psychic self-defence, whenever I stand in front of a mirror. Cruising the Ionian and Adriatic Seas with a boatload of baby-boomers will do that to you.

Overwhelmingly, these boomers are Americans, and like Americans everywhere carry their arrogance and ignorance as effortlessly as they carry their sunglasses on the peaks of their baseball caps. At one time, at least some of them would have been long-haired, free-loving, pot-smoking college students. Some may even have marched against the Vietnam War and been quick with phrases like “Right-on, brother!” and “Come the revolution.” If you squint your eyes you can sort of see them as they were: young, idealistic, full of certainty that the world must change, and that they would be the ones to change it.

Then they come back into focus, and you see how far their youth (like their hairlines) has receded. What also becomes clear is that the scale and scope of their ambition was not misplaced – merely misapprehended. Because the world has changed, and they were the ones who changed it. But, oh, what changes – and changers!

I used to think that the Editor of The Daily Blog, Martyn Bradbury, was altogether too hard on my generation. That the people who fought against war, racism and nuclear weapons; and for the environment, women’s liberation and gay rights; deserved better from the generations that succeeded them. But then I boarded the MV Veendam at the port of Civitavecchia, and saw up close what my generation has become. Or, at least, what that same privileged stratum of my generation that got to go to university, flirt with radicalism, and participate in the great “youth revolt” of the Sixties and Seventies, has become. The stratum that, while no longer ruling the world, provides the rock-solid political base of the people who do.

- Sponsor Promotion -

Don’t get me wrong: these people are all perfectly “nice”. They will greet you cheerily, and invite you to “have a great day”, but few, if any, seem to grasp what an extraordinary microcosm of the world the average cruise liner represents.

It is commanded by a multinational crew of professional technocrats and managers. It is enjoyed by a privileged community of mostly rich, mostly old, and mostly white passengers. And it is kept functioning by a huge number of mostly poor, mostly young, and mostly brown workers.

While it’s entirely possible that I am wrong, and that beneath all these blandly contented faces seethe the passions of raging socialists, my strong impression is that my fellow travellers simply do not see – let alone recognise – the glaring parallels between real and shipboard life.

That I see them does not, of course, exonerate me. I remain on board this floating zoo of ageing boomers: eating and drinking my fill; going on the excursions to Corfu and Dubrovnik; watching the sun set over the Adriatic from my stateroom on the Verandah Deck. Like all journalists, I gift myself the privilege of standing back and describing the players and the props and the plot of the drama unfolding before me, while doing nothing practical to change it. I could have said: “This is not for me, I’m getting off this ship of superannuated troughers!” But, I didn’t. I stayed and pigged-out with the best of them. Being pampered and privileged – if only for seven days – is simply too much fun!

It’s only at night, in the darkened bars, where the hard-working musicians play endless versions of Sixties and Seventies standards, that you sometimes see the smiles fade.

All of us are old. All of us have more of our lives behind us than in front of us. And, sitting there in the comfortable darkness, sipping our Pina Coladas and Cosmopolitans, that’s when the awful truth – that it’s nearly over – hits home. You can see it on our faces: the realisation that the hopes and dreams of our youth have not been, and probably never will be, fulfilled.

And that’s when, suddenly, it becomes clear that the people all around you are not looking at the dancers on the floor; or at the expensive objets d’art strategically-placed about the room; but back through the years. Back to when the music was louder; and our blood was hotter; and the sheer unrelentingness of life had not defeated the luckiest generation that ever lived.

It would be wrong to conclude this rather bleak dispatch without acknowledging the presence on the cruise of a number of younger people. Gen-Xers, Gen-Ys and Millennials – they are here, too. And – guess what? – they show every sign of being as blissfully unaware of what lies in store for them as we did forty or fifty years ago. How could it be otherwise? Youth is only valued when its gone. The future only reveals its treacherous character when becomes the past. It is in the nature of living to be disappointed and dismayed by the constantly reasserted continuities of human existence, and the impermanence of its achievements.

Yes, the Baby Boomers changed the world – but nothing like as much as it changed them. The world will change the Millennials, also. Maybe more, maybe much more, than it ever changed the lives of their parents’ and grandparents’. All stories must, eventually, have an end.

But still, the ship sails on.

 

24 COMMENTS

  1. You’r not wasting your maturity when you bring us eloquent reflections like this Chris.
    Seems a bit of a waste to go all that way to park in a floating hotel full of geriatric Yanks though. Did you get to play a few hands of Bridge? They all play American standard don’t they !
    We avoided tours and other tourists as much as possible , but that leaves one talking only to the natives trained to deal with tourists as part of their job. You get to feel real dumb not knowing their language and needing someone there to have learned yours so you can get by.
    Some crash courses in languages needed before the next adventure.
    I recon you have not lost your idealism though Chris. You keep it alive for all of us.
    D J S

  2. Exquisitely written .

    Wonderful piece.

    —————————–

    I could have said: “This is not for me, I’m getting off this ship of superannuated troughers!”

    ——————————

    But cheer up , Chris !, … I rummaged around for a song from the 1970’s… 1970 actually !

    I think its highly pertinent for all of us with ageing bodies… I hope you enjoy it 🙂

    Black Sabbath – Children Of The Grave/Embryo – YouTube
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X7UZeHvMYZA

  3. Oh,… and I guess I better deliver the lyrics so I don’t get tarred and feathered and run outa’ town for being a complete smartass !

    Children of the Grave. Black Sabbath.

    ——————————-

    Revolution in their minds, the children start to march
    Against the world in which they have to live and all the hate that’s in their hearts
    They’re tired of being pushed around and told just what to do
    They’ll fight the world until they’ve won and love comes flowing through, yeah!

    Children of tomorrow live in the tears that fall today
    Will the sunrise of tomorrow bring in peace in any way?
    Must the world live in the shadow of atomic fear?
    Can they win the fight for peace or will they disappear? Yeah!

    So you children of the world, listen to what I say
    If you want a better place to live in, spread the word today
    Show the world that love is still alive, you must be brave
    Or you children of today are children of the grave, yeah

    [Outro]
    Children of the grave
    Children of the grave

  4. And just to show you there’s life in an old rocker- here they are performing the same song in their sixties ! Ozzie with his black fingernail polish still lookin’ ghoulish.

    Thousands of young men and women raging out hard, – and the balloons, man !- the balloons!!!

    Black Sabbath – “Children of the Grave” from The End – YouTube
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zUT730G-xvA

  5. Funnily enough I’m the happiest I’ve ever been.
    With the wolf making its way to my door, twilight setting in,not a lot of money but enough, I’m grateful for every day I still have my siblings and friends, my partner still alive and with his marbles, the sun on my back , a lake to swim in , the birds and seasons to watch and enjoy, whatever health I have left.
    I know the sun’s going down and there’s not a lot of time left, so I’m loving it while I still can

    • Francesca… It’s a lovely name, a wonder it is not more common. I keep wondering if you have an older sister called Anita; very pretty too but not quite so spectacularly so. If so you might remember a gormless pathologically shy farm boy.
      I don’t want to live through my teens again.
      Cheers D J S

  6. Wish there was an edit button
    so I could say how much I loved this piece Chris, gorgeously written
    Thank you

  7. Superannuated troughers, pigged out, pampered, privileged….love it. Nice lines, perfectly apt. Chris proving pigs have trotters too.

    Of course our generation merely did what humans do, different generations are still driven by the same human drivers, that doesn’t change. Another wine please, and another for Chris. Salut.

  8. The mistake everyone makes, is to think that the baby boomers were all left wing and/or hippies. As Country Joe of the San Francisco band Country Joe and the Fish once said, he only had to go inland ten miles from the west coast and he was in red neck territory. While baby boomers were the product of their own unique time, the vast majority were conformist.

Comments are closed.