mercredi 11 août 2021

Covid War Chronicles (2/9) : The Roses of the Rhine

 

"I need a vaccine in the region I am on" Lord Spoonner

The feeling of duty accomplished, on the evening of this Tuesday, March 10, comes to me a great desire for fresh air, a bit like a final deep breath before a very long apnea. The cerebral lobe that manages inside me the call of the great outdoors is coasting. My primary desire always turns first to the Ocean, but the weather is looking gloomy next weekend in Saint-Malo. Then comes to me a desire for Rhine. I look at the forecast weather for Strasbourg. The statistics are good. “Prima!” (“Awesome!” in German) I release inside me along with a burst of endorphins, that pleasure hormone that then floods my brain.

I check two or three things on the Net then I get up and go see my Lover. Quizzical eyebrows, she questions my kid's smile that just swallow a whole bar of chocolate.

My Love, before the lockdown that is coming, what do you say, next weekend, about a little whim, just You and I.” With these words, I have all her attention.

"Yes, how would you like a flammenkuche in Strasbourg before going to buy cigarettes in Germany?"

In Strasbourg, in the heart of the Grand-Est region epidemical cluster?” She asks me, laughing.

"Yes!” I tell her. “If we haven't caught the Covid19 in the cattle wagons of line 13 or 2 of the Parisian metro, or in the tapas bars of Madrid, there is little chance of catching it on the banks of the Rhine”.

"Come to think about it, normally we have to vote this Sunday", she continues. "Exactly, I don't want to", I said with a wry smile.

All right, go to Strasbourg” she concludes with a laugh, then in the process, I take us a hotel room via the Booking site platform as well as TGV train tickets. The journey time will be extended due to damage on the conventional track following the fall of an embankment last week. One hour more for each trip passing through Metz city. It does not matter. I do not know the banks of the Moselle River, nor the Metz countryside that I will discover from the windows of the train. We will leave early Saturday morning and return late Sunday evening, thus escaping the transhumance of the electoral herd, and making the most of our romantic getaway.

This Saturday March 14, 2020, in the morning, in this half-empty train, I grumble on the fact that our government really takes the population for a herd of lemmings on morphine. Thursday night's presidential address, with contradictory instructions, leaves me with half-hearted impression. "You will vote on Sunday and then we will close the schools the next day". This form of political flippancy, urging us to vote when the health climate grows heavier day after day, leads to a frivolity that is far more blameworthy than laudable. Moreover, the controversy is swelling in the country following the maintenance of municipal elections. "This is sure to leave traces" I say to myself as our train runs along the Moselle River and as I stroke the neck of my sleeping sweetie in my arms.

"They may well give the impression of controlling the situation, everyone feels that it slips through their fingers", I said to myself while our train is stationary on the tracks "due to reorganization of the traffic railroad following the TGV accident” last week. We leave.

Metz station is imposing. The city looks cute. I would have to explore it one day. It will be an opportunity to visit my Uncle GéPi. Then we pop up into Alsace by the forest balloons of the Vosges. I love this region. I love its natives. My father also has fond memories of it.

When he emigrated to France, it was to work in the Schneider family quarry in Bust town. The first words he learned in France were in the Alsatian dialect so that he could order beers at the local tavern. My father will always keep in mind, both the kindness of the Schneider girls who brought him fruit baskets on Sundays, and the Alemannic hard-working rigor of old Schneider who reminded him of his own father's Galician rigor (Galicians : Celtic people of the North of Portugal and Spain).

The recounting of his Alsatian memories was always an opportunity for my father to tell us how he had come to France thanks to an employment contract with the Schneiders, and not clandestinely like my mother; how he was mocked by the Italian workers "who took us for rednecks without know-how"; how he had won the respect of Italians and French by the quality of his work. My mother usually follow up on her journey through the Portuguese and Spanish mountains before arriving in her "beloved France", the one where working meant "to eat one's fill and above all make projects"; how she was kidnapped for several weeks by one of her first employers, before being released by police from the station where she was later employed as a cleaning lady. "Without owing me anything, France gave me all the opportunities that I was able to seize," she said. For his part, constantly concerned with the "saudade" of his country, while cherishing this France where he chose to found his home, my father demanded, at the same time, that we speak Portuguese under his roof in order to cultivate our Portuguese roots, and that we are "perfect French, once the door is through". "I will control that by the quality of your companions as well as by the value of your school work" he hammered.

"It would be nice if I visit Bust too," I thought to myself, thinking about it all. In the meantime, having passed Haguenau city, our train is quietly approaching Strasbourg along the rivers and canals of the Bas-Rhin. I can't wait to get there and to show my Sweetheart the secrets of this Magnificent Venice of the North.

My love for Strasbourg is perfectly summed up in this excerpt from a letter from Edgar Quinet to his mother:

This city of Strasbourg pleases me more than I can say. I love this Alsatian temper, something hospitable and free; I love this cathedral so close to me, I especially love the vicinity of the Rhine. He reminds me all the unlimited things in history."

Here we are. The weather is nice. We quickly pass the station area, which is as disgusting as it is decidedly so little Alsatian. In front of the swinish condition of the sidewalks, I wonder why some people express so much their "halal" refusal to eat pork meat, when they perfectly illustrate this French expression "happy as a pig in its bauge". Perhaps a taboo? The fear of sinking into a type of cannibalism.

Leaving this question behind us, we cross the Kuss bridge, walk along the Quai Turckheim towards the picturesque district of “Petite France”.

Each time I come, I fell down in a swoon in front of these houses on the banks of the arms of the Ill River, with a half-timbered architecture made of entwined beams like oak or fir pretzels, supporting pretty roofs covered with these typical tiles in beaver tail, and highlighted by facades with colored plasterwork.

Despite the sun, it is not the atmosphere of great days, that of Christmas or Easter, or even that of sunny days. Of course, children are having fun in the playground on Île du Square de Moulins, and a few bunches of teenagers are laughing while drinking beers on the island opposite, in the shade of the trees of Square Louise-Weiss, but nothing comparable with the usual atmosphere, teeming with orderly Alsatian life, embellished with a significant tourist trepidation.

This feeling is shared by the waiter at the pretty tavern on the Place du Marché-aux-Cochons-de-Lait, who serves us our delicious “tarts flambées” cooked over a wood fire. Accompanied by a small salad and a good beer, what a delight!

After paying our respects to the majestic cathedral of pink sandstone, we eat there for noon. There are lots of people inside this rustic tavern, adorned with colorful stained glass windows that give it a medieval warmth atmosphere. But the terraces outside are deserted. The waiter at the Pfifferbriader tavern, a man with a humor as easy as communicative, accompanies our observations with some concern for the business continuity. The establishment manager paces in the direction of the restaurant entrance, having difficulty in hiding his dismay as his gaze sweeps the desperately empty streets.


After that, we reach our hotel along the "Quai des Bâteliers" flooded with light instead of walkers. A few rare Strasbourg residents enjoy the mild sun, on the quayside pontoons, as a couple or with friends, but keeping their distance. “Social distancing measures” are now giving the tuning.

At the hotel, which I had chosen on its name, as a tribute to the Rhine roses that I love so much, we are greeted by the manager with genuinely delicate manners peculiar to the civility of Egyptian Arabs. Considering his manners and the sweet sounds of the dialectal Arabic he spoke with his daughter at the reception, it seems to me to be the case. There don't seem to be many people in the establishment. This probably explains why the manager gave us the magnificent room decorated with a pretty representation of Venus by Botticelli, and with a balcony offering a pleasant view of the canal.

The setting is magnificent. It puts us in a sentimental mood, to put it that way.

After having fete this idyllic setting by crumpling the bed, it's time to head to Germany. To take a French live to Germany. I like to steal away like this, especially on election weekends. I did so during the first round of the 2017 presidential elections, by going to vote in a den of libertarian artists in the industrial port of the Rhine. Going to Germany is my way of voting with my feet, by paying homage to mature democracies, the German republic being a model for me.

We jump on the tramway which passes not far from the hotel, and get off a few minutes later at the terminus on the German side, near Kehl station. We are not the only ones. The full steetcar is pouring out residents of the Strasbourg metropolis who have come to stock up on cigarettes 40% cheaper than in France, as well as cheaper food on the Teutonic side. Germany, the country where life is taxed less. They leave Kehl as soon as they are done their shopping.

This is not our case. After having stocked up on cigarettes for my graceful evanescent, in the shops located around the station, I show her Kehl's other charms: the rose garden, the residential area with opulent houses lined up along a pond which closes its southern loop at the foot of the Kehl panoramic tower.

“Weißtannenturm”, "the White Fir Tower", a wooden tower 44 meters high which offers a magnificent view of the whole region. The tower moves with each of our steps, which increases the vertigo of my stability lover. Vertigo that she fights to please me. But as I tell her with each of our explorations, everything that is really beautiful is earned, she climbs keeping away from the edge. Up there, indeed, the view worth the detour and the giddiness. She grips my arms to admire the view.

On the German side, towards the south-east, we admire the mountains of the Black Forest where the white wood of the tower comes from.

On the French side, we contemplate Strasbourg, from which emerges the spire of its imperial pink sandstone cathedral, then in the distance, drawing curves above the horizon, the blue crests of the Vosges Mountains.

Descended from the tower, in the direction of the banks of the Rhine, I show her the water play park at Wasserspielplatz-am-Rhein, where my children had fun two summers before, then we stroll along the German banks of "Parc des Deux Rives", the Garden of the two shores, before it comes time to take the imposing pedestrian bridge that links France and Germany.

A series of kisses take place in the middle of the "Mimram Footbridge", gazing into the mighty waters of Western Europe's longest river.

There, I think of these words of Victor Hugo "There is all the history of Europe in this river of warriors and thinkers, in this superb wave which makes France leap, in this deep murmur which makes dream the Germany; The Rhine brings it all together ”. That is true! The Rhine brings it all together.

Everytime I am here, I hope that I could glimpse the gold of the Rhine sparkling at the bottom of the waves, the gold of my Suevi ancestors migrating fifteen centuries ago towards the Atlantic shores of Galicia. Smiling, I say to myself each time "Das ist so romantich". This time I say it while holding my treasure wife in my arms.

Back at the hotel, we crumple again the sheets of our loving alcove, while we wait for the time to look for a house in which to dine.

My wife has no equal when it comes to finding a perfect culinary lair for us. She hits the nail on the head every time. Probably a sophisticated mutation of the hunting instinct.

After strolling through the streets of the Place Saint-Etienne district, and passing restaurants with exotic names, her gaze lingers on the front of an Alsatian brasserie. “After all we came here to eat local,” she says. As I opened the door to the Winstub "Meiselocker", and let her in first, all accompanied by a broad smile, I tell her "no worries, I'm following you".

While installing us, the owner seems to continue a discussion with the customers already seated, that our entry had interrupted. We are very quickly be on the ball. The very last step of the government waltz has just decided the closure of all bars and restaurants this Saturday at midnight o'clock.

We look at each other taken aback and decide to savor with special application an Alsatian roast beef and a ham braised in beer. Succulents! Between two bites, half amused, half upset, we wonder what we will eat tomorrow in a Strasbourg with suddenly closed tables. With the dessert, we are worried about all these restorers which have had to refuel and which will have to throw away all the merchandise. Finally, as we leave the restaurant, we wonder about these brutal and untimely government decisions.

"Oh that, they have a sense of the absurd" said my darling, "they are closing the restaurants tonight, while opening the polling stations tomorrow! This will encourage voters, not to doubt it! "

I promised you adventure my dear; tomorrow we will have to survive the food blackout”, I answer her, laughing.

She adds in an amused tone, “It's okay sweetheart, all we need is love and pretzels.”

That’s nearly what the manager of our hotel will tell us the next day at breakfast. We only are two couples in the breakfast lounge, but the service is no less regal. The choice is more than complete. While savoring it, we share with the manager our feelings of the day before. He tells us in a phlegmatic tone, the unreal atmosphere that reigns, the sluggish activity, the tense shopping he did yesterday afternoon during which "wicked ladies were fighting over boxes of flageolet beans." For the day, he reassures us with a smile. “You will find many pretzels in the bakeries that will remain open; with love and fresh water, that should be enough.

We did find pretzels in Dreher bakeries, at Place Gutenberg and Place du Corbeau. However, we encountered another difficulty on the way.

Leaving the hotel around 11 am, we head towards the European quarter, along the banks of the Ill. The streets are empty. The docks are ours.

Besides the European Parliament and the imposing Council of Europe building that looks like a gohaould spaceship (#Stargate) at rest, I want to show the "Parc de l'Orangerie" to my bird of paradise. Not far from the city center, this green lung offers several attractions in addition to a most pleasant resting place around the tree-lined lawns and its pond. The main one is a zoo open to the public. But my favorite attraction are the storks that nest in the park.

This Sunday, March 15, the storks are there, especially on the main building of the park serving this day as a polling station. We stay awhile watching this deliverer of babies with a long beak. This old myth will make us forever see this master of the skies with long migrations as a just special birdy. However, the zoo is closed. What a pity. I wanted to see and admire the flamingos that live there.

"You wouldn't know if there is a toilet in the area," she asks me. If my wife follows me on my travels, there is one factor that I have learned to deal with. His very regular bathroom breaks. So I calculate the routes accordingly. As I knew there were some in the park, I quietly welcomed his question. But like I said above, this is where things get tricky. The two public toilets at the “Parc de l'Orangerie” are closed.

"They don't have all the same closed all the public toilets in the city to force the loiterers to go home," I ask aloud, a little disappointed. My loiterer looks at me worriedly. Closed  public toilets, coffee shops as well. The afternoon promises to be as pressing as the urge arises. Leaving the park, I even have the movie title of the day "Impossible Micturation".

As I say that, an idea seizes me. “But come to think of it, we're in the embassy district. Chances are he's over there, and I'm sure that the fact that we stop by to visit him, even briefly, for a simple technical break, makes him laugh". My wife doesn't understand. Laughing, I respond to his questioning gaze by releasing a "How would you like to pee in the classiest toilets in the world?" Then I make a phone call.

For sure, the sanitary facilities of this embassy are: Carrara marble with an alpine whiteness underlined by golden taps with clean lines, all embellished with Dior soap leaving a very pleasant background scent. And as expected, my impromptu visit as well as the reason for it make laugh this old friend. He welcomes the presentations with my sweetheart for his charming hospitality.

Jolly good! By the time we review your request for sanitary asylum at my embassy, ​​we will be able to open the bottle of Slyrs that I have set aside for one of your visits; it seems that the Bavarians know how to make whiskey; we will verify it ”.

It is part of our little rituals. Each of our reunions is always an opportunity to explore the planet Malt a little further. And it is clear that the Bavarians know how to make Whiskey. With its vanilla scent with woody touches and citrus notes, this glass of Slyrs is as pleasing to the nostrils as it is to the taste buds. My dear and tender, for her part, opts for a white Port from one of Dalva's best years.

After the usual courtesies and while my sweetheart visits the toilets, this old comrade expresses to me his concern about world affairs which now seem to be going at breakneck speed. Then he takes us back to the border of his territorial enclave. He salutes us with a big smile. "I hope that your next visit to Strasbourg will give us more time to talk," he concluded.

Back in the city center and after seeing that everything is indeed well closed, offering the very commercial Place Kléber to the few vagabonds who squat it and furnish it with their drunken quarrels, we manage to buy gingerbread in the Woerlé bakery, at the corner of “Division Leclerc” street and “rue des Serrurier”s. This purchase was one of the must-haves. “Mission Accomplished!"

Now we can go and sit down on the "Quai des Bâteliers". Access to the pontoon, on the Place du Corbeau side, is closed, but the Strasbourg couples skip it to enjoy this last weekend by the water.

In Strasbourg, do it like the people of Strasbourg”. We do the same. Passing over the closed barrier, we descend and settle on the pontoon while maintaining the safety distances that everyone seems to have integrated. There, while tasting our pretzels and our gingerbread, we enjoy the sunshine while admiring the silver lighting effects on the ripples of the Ill river, produced by the maneuvers of the resplendent white swans, sailing in formation, and which seem to reign there in masters. It is true that the promenade shuttles remain at the quayside.

The sweetness of this moment flows quietly at our feet. We savor every minute of it, enjoying the calm, the softness and the light, pressed together. Happiness is that. Happiness is simple. It sits there with the woman I love so much.

A woman to endure the disgust of misfortune; a few others to learn how to escape it for good; and then finally the one, the only one with whom you discover the sweet warmth of happiness” I said to myself, in a thought contracting time, while hugging my happiness in my arms.

These moments will rock us on our return TGV. But before letting us rock, I must get rid of the millstone that is polluting the start of the travel.

After a pass by the hotel to pick up our belongings and take the opportunity to "you know what", we board the return train. We are almost alone in the upper room of the wagon. This is the first time that I have bought a ticket on a TGV Ouigo ( a low price TGV). I discovered when I took the seats that there were three categories of tickets: basic; seat with electrical outlet; quiet place. I took seats with an electrical outlet. In the age of energy-hungry batteries, this can come in handy.

As the train is about to leave, a lady sits behind us, and while plugging in her cell phone, asks us if we can watch it, while she tells her husband, who remains in the downstairs room, that she found a free place with an electrical outlet at the top.

Recognizing the bourgeois-Sephardic-to-stiff-wig style, I say to myself “look! An orthodox Shoshanna! What these “sheitels” prescribed by the Jewish clergy to impose decency on women, thus forcing them to hide their real hair, can be as ridiculous as not very discreet”. Then I tell her that we will watch over her cell phone. I put it in my seat. My head of  Portuguese Marrano, carved like a Golem in Galician granite, must have reassured her.

We begin to doze off, rocked by the light rolling of the train, our memories and the calm of the wagon, when Lady Shoshanna comes back up. I give her back her cell phone. As soon as she takes it back, she picks it up and calls her son, speaking loudly and nervously. I tell myself that if she doesn't make her call from the platform, it will be brief. Well no. Her son is in the grocery store and his mother gives him the shopping list for containment and the approaching Passover, while controlling each point in Kashrut. Now I tell myself that it will be very long and that it will annoy me.

Jonathan! Ask your sister to take five boxes of Uncle Ben's rice, the natural flavorless (...)

Jonathan! Take the dried apricots from Turkey; Jonathan! You take whole dried apricots, not the soft ones; Jonathan! You make sure there is no glucose syrup on it; Jonathan! You take three boxes of it; you're already loaded, okay, that's okay my son, so just take two boxes (...)

Jonathan! Don't forget the olive oil; it's extremely important; you take a good look at whether there is the label, yes the starK-P label; Jonathan! You know what, take the Terra Delysa brand, it is anyway kosher Lepessah, yes the one in a 3 liter metal container; Jonathan! Take 6 cans, it keeps well; you’re already arms full! It's okay my son, so take only five jerrycans of it  (...)

Jonathan, my son! Get me your sister…”

My God, what a nightmare! ". This has been going on for twenty minutes and my ears are bleeding. While thinking of this poor Jonathan, and finally of the happiness of not having had an Orthodox Jewish mother, a bigote-Catholic mother already being enough, I meditate on the absurdities of our species. Do not see anything pretentious about it. This is just a purgative exercise in order to not blow a fuse.

So this lady, who with her husband has taken a seat downstairs without an electrical outlet, all that to scrape out five miserable euros, comes to charge her cell phone in our compartment. It's ridiculous but why not. With the compartment almost empty, she could go plug in her phone at the other end and make a phone call, being kind enough to avoid break the balls of an uncircumcised dick. But no ! It’s so much better to stick with people and sprinkle them with our behavioral outbursts. No doubt a need to be reassured by the presence of others.  A need for a blankie in stressful situations. And it is true that I have a good head of teddy.

In any event, in this matter, there are two types of people on this Earth.

Those properly circumscribed, who consider that their freedom ends where that of the other begins; who know that everyone has concerns to manage, thoughts to develop, or needs for calm to taste; that just because someone isn't talking doesn't mean they're not busy; and who consequently avoid spraying those around them with their cerebral regurgitations, poured out as they come; who make sure that the other is available, that he is not resting, thinking or just digesting his own cerebral regurgitations.

And then there are people as egocentric as this lady. People who don't like being alone to the point of constantly parasitize others with their outbursts. Probably a sealing problem. People for whom the other has no existence of their own. The other only beeing intended to serve as a receptacle for their effusions or a bag of needs.

In general, signify to this kind of person that you too have an existence of your own, with your own needs, including that of calm, moreover at a time or a place where social standards admits it as being taken for granted ( a train compartment for example), generates two types of reactions. Anger, this kind of individual does not admit that you can signify your existence to her, or a grandiloquent leniency, this kind of person  accepting in her majesty to accede to your plea, which inevitably has something humiliating for the one who wants what goes without saying between properly educated people.

Since there is no way I will receive hysteria throws or a dismissive "so be it", I decide to do the most logical thing to do. Since we don't exist, let's pretend this lady doesn't exist.

Turning to my Beloved, whose gentleness as agnostic as Gallic makes this kind of behavior quite extraterrestrial, but frankly stunned by this endless litany of groceries, I tell her what is happening. I explain to her, or rather I comment on the scene, aloud, and in a strongly mocking tone.

The bewigged soon realizes that my baritone voice sends back a mocking echo of her conversation. In retaliation, she decides to plug in the loudspeaker of her cell phone. Never mind, I also mimic the answers of her poor son Jonathan, while explaining to my Darling the meaning of the particular kashrut on the feast of Passover.

At that moment, my wife to hide her embarrassment, asks me how I know this. I answer her, giving her a knowing wink, while taking a guttural voice and imitating the finger of God that "this is my Moses side." Blasphemy is too much. The ill-behaved orthodox, without saying a word, gets up and leaves the compartment.

With a laugh, I release a "Mission accomplished!" Here we are Liberated! All in less than five minutes! Honest to God! If the Mossad saw this, he would be impressed! Make a religious Jewish mother surrender her position, all in less than five minutes, it's psychological warfare genius. I should teach my methods at the Institute #LOL".

Calm returned, we finally let ourselves be rocked up to Paris...

 


lundi 9 août 2021

Covid War Chronicles (1/9) : it started well

"Whoever is good at solving difficulties does so before they arise" Sun Tzu

All this started well. At the end of January 2020, news were soothing, as only fake news allowed by the authorities can ultimately be. General Winter had frozen most of the Chinese viral offensive, apparently born from the crossbreeding of a pangolin skewer and a bat tartare, before it crossed the Great Wall of China. Enough to give me time to anticipate, on my derisory personal scale, the best and the worst of the spasms of our violent planet.

Let's start with the best.

After two months of winter blockade by the vile saboteurs of the transport Unions, many of us rejoice at the idea of a return to normal life with spring. "Give us back our lives" was our slogan, in response to the idiocies that the restless of the Union kennels barked as they paraded, all those endless weeks, in a Paris as paralyzed as a leftist brain.

And since the threat of the nasty "flu" doesn't make us scream, “my God! We're all going to die again! ”, we start making plans.

After all, we all had to die already: from the Millennium Bug in 2000; Anthrax in 2001; West Nile fever in 2002; SARS in 2003; avian influenza in 2005; the financial crisis in 2008; H1N1 influenza in 2009; the e.coli epidemic in 2011; the Mayan calendar in 2012; the North Korean missile crisis in 2013; melting ice in 2014; the Islamic State in 2015; and Zika and Ebola viruses in 2016.

But we are, almost all, still there. So why should we fall into alarmist hysteria?

Even more so the Taiwanese of democratic China demonstrate that the viral threat coming from Wuhan can be managed with much more efficiency and fewer deprivations than in dictatorial China.

So I dare to think that my government, the government of the 7th powerful economy in the world, will not fail to adopt equivalent or much better measures to protect the most fragile among us while keeping the country in working order.

Covid19, my great Nation is going to smash you! Not even scared vulgar miasma made in China! #PlannedObsolescence”, I boast, as a typical Frenchiest, while discovering that the first cases of “Chinese flu” are landing among “Us”.

In my overconfidence crisis, I imagine the beautiful and reassuring Minister of Health, Madam Agnès Buzyn, as tranquilizing as a general anesthesia, opening, not her immaculate doctor's coat on a delicious mature nudity (I know you bunch of sex maniacs), but the strategic stock of a billion masks, while erecting  (gang of perverts) the power of our wonderful health system that the whole world envies us (oh yes!). I even tell myself that the feather-duster face, that is the very verbose Minister of the Economy, will come out of his powerlessness (heap of depraved) by mobilizing the necessary industrial resources and by stimulating (oh yes! Again!) technological innovation.

A little less excited, I list the measures with which Taiwan or South Korea manage the viral danger. It is true that the porcelain neighbors of elephantine China, sometimes threatened in their vital interests by the upheavals of the Asian giant, have learned the lessons of the SARS crisis of 2003 and then of the H1N1 virus in 2009 which had struck the region. They can also read well enough between the lines of Chinese propaganda to be alarmed when necessary.

Here are the measures in question:

• Immediate control at the border of passengers coming from mainland China as soon as the Chinese authorities decree confinement. When you think about it, a border is like the skin, it should be used to filter out pathogenic threats.

• Population wide-testing with strict confinement of patients and digital tracking of infected people, something acceptable since it is not a generalized and constant tracking, infringing on freedoms, but targeted and provisional in view to avoid loss of human lives.

• Mask wearing, protecting the rest of the population from carriers not yet detected, according to the basic principle that the best way to protect yourself from a respiratory virus is to wear a respiratory mask. A protection which allows to maintain a semblance of normal life, and above all, the productive potential of the country almost intact.

• Mobilization of industrial and innovative infrastructures to produce the necessary for crisis management (masks, tests, medical and digital tools) and anticipate what will happen next.

I conclude that we will do the same but better because we are French, and if we still do not have shale-oil, we have no shortage of well-oiled ideas...

All to my reverie, I can already imagine myself, under the first solar caresses of spring, walking after work with my sweet Dulcinea on the banks of The Seine, a delicious ice cream from “The Berthillon House” in my hand, bought on the island of “La Cité”, before settling down in an ephemeral bar at the “Quai d'Orsay” to enjoy the Parisian dolce-vita.

I'm already rubbing my hands at this idea, seeing my fingers move from her beautiful sun-brown curls to her so soft neck; and I lick my chops, imagining her luscious tongue, scented with its mixture of light tobacco and "fisherman's friend" mint lozenges (#ProductPlacement), greedily sucked through my mouth, between two slices of tapenade drizzled with white beer.

Then the days pass, each day bringing its share of not as pleasantly springtime announcements as I hoped. The only things that are budding in this second half of February are the covid19 cases. These are emerging in various parts of the planet, like mushrooms on an old moldy stump that would serve as a world map, especially in Iran, in our Italy as dear as neighboring, but also here, at home, in France.

Besides there is something particularly sardonic about this outbreak. The virus seems to preferably target religious: Christian sect in South Korea, mullahs in Iran, evangelists in France, ultra-Orthodox in Israel, and football fans in Italy since the faithful of the second Italian religion seem to compete with the ‘stoup’s frogs’ (a french metaphor for bigots pillar-biters) who are going to contaminate themselves in the churches.

Ironically, one of the outbreak sites appears to have been directly imported by Military Services while the repatriation of the French expatriates from Wuhan to the “Oise” county. "If State didn't exist, who would infect you?” laughed my libertarians friends. In retrospect, we can say that this will only be the beginning of a long Way of the Cross for the French Statist Church.

Anyway, we’re laughing, we’re laughing, but deep down, all this leaves me a little circumspect.

I felt the first doubts dawning when the government, along with its servile and apathetic media commentators, began to announce:

• That the masks were useless for the common person but essential for the medical staff. I concluded that the latter ones must have more fragile bronchi than ours. No! I'm kidding!

• That the virus did not have a passport and that there was no point in closing the borders. Meanwhile, China's neighboring countries were demonstrating the opposite.

 

• That the Italians were less efficient than us. Finally, One day, we'll have to stop blaming the Italians for stealing us the 2006 FIFA World Cup. It was in the wake of Zidane's headbutt on Materrazi, that we should have launched a nuclear strike on Rome. Praying now that they all die from the Coronavirus fourteen years later is resentful. All the more so as our budget chasm will soon join theirs, we will very soon need our wop cousins to go and beg for money from our german cousins. Let's be pragmatic!

 

• That the viral storm would stop at our borders, like the "Chernobyl’s radiocative Cloud" in its time. After all "Bis Repetita Placent".

 

Doubts quickly repressed. What can I say, in the face of danger, the first reflexes are either to flee or to deny. In denial we tell ourselves that our government cannot be that bad. To play politics is to serve your country. With all the reports piling up, they must necessarily have a plan, a solution, a more sophisticated but just as effective method as the Taiwanese. "We're one of the world's greatest powers, damn it! We have the best health care system in the world, holy shit! Etc. "

 

I disillusioned quite quickly and, with the viral outbreak that was starting to set in the east of France, I had to learn that in my beautiful country, to govern is neither planning nor reacting accordingly, but rather to lie and spend "crazy money" to save government’s face, leaving us at the end the huge bill.

 

Nothing really surprising. After all, our president announced in his presidential campaign that the transformative revolutionary spirit of France, the only real French political genius, must win. Transform France, transform the world. "Because this is our project!" They should only be good in challenges of galactic magnitude. "Because this is our project!” To smash a nasty little pandemic should not be worthy of their magnificence. It does not push them to overtake. "Because this is our project!"

 

From press release to press release, by Lady Silly-pet, the government spokeswoman, a circus freak wearing ridiculous pajamas, whose remarks are relayed word for word by the medias as complacent as they are subsidized, it’s obvious that: to govern is reduced to communicate, comment, in short jabbering, while letting-do-anything-letting-anyone-pass...

All the more that rumors of a masks, respirators and hospital beds shortage, in the “Grand Est” Region, are emerging. When you think that the president of the Grand Est Region happens to be a doctor, you tell yourself that history likes to be teasing.

So, rather than mild, spring promises to be boiling hot. While laughing with  friends, we say to ourselves that it may herald the eight weeks of summer heatwave that will hit us in a few months.

Therefore, at the beginning of March, I began to anticipate the worst.

Oh I assure you, I'm not the kind of guy to panic violently. I much prefer to panic quietly, in an organized fashion.

Unlike the government which discovers what it needs as the crisis progresses, I list what is needed, taking into account the panic movements that happened in Asia, Australia, Italy. Above all, I take into account the fact that the human race can be everywhere extremely primitive and therefore predictable.

I also take into account the last lies of the government not announcing immediate sanitary confinement, or rather announcing on Norman-style, "maybe yes, maybe no", our Norman Prime Minister being a handsome specimen, since even his zebra beard now displays a Norman coloring, "maybe black, maybe white".

In fact, at the beginning of March, when rumors from the corridors of the administration and large companies announce a six-week lockdown from mid-March, the liars who govern us invite us to lead a normal life. The president sets an example by going to the theater. And the political class, all sides confused, drooling its thirst for mandates, expresses its haste to see the French defy the virus by going to vote for the municipal elections...

I wondered why the government was lying like this. Does he have several options? Does he really believe in what he's telling us as he goes along, kind of like he's thinking out loud? Things which are not reassuring. Because either the Government is lying to itself, which shows some incompetence, or cynically it takes us for idiots, relying on our blue surgeonfish memory  (#TributeToDory) to make forget its successive lies.

And then, what is this mania to govern with the conditional language? No one teach them that you govern, either in the present or in the future, but never in the conditional. Bunch of apprentice rulers!

Anyway, no longer believing anything the Authorities tell us, I list the necessities for muggins, my wife and my old father.

I list and I buy in small batches every day. Then I stock up at my daddy's, and at home, enough packs of water, bags of rice, pasta, and canned fish, to hold out for a month. A bit ashamed, I am also building up a strategic stock of toilet paper.

I must now convince my tender and dear one to make similar arrangements.

I do not yet know where I will spend my lockdown, at her flat or at my home. For two years now, I crash more often at my sweet partner home than in my eagle's nest, or rather bluetit nest, located in the inner suburbs of Paris.

Her flat, a lovely sunny apartment with a balcony, is located an hour from my home, in a working-class Parisian district as I like them, socially and ethnically mixed but so Parisian. I go there almost every night. The pleasure of falling asleep against each other is such that any separation of more than 48 hours is distressing. I love to see her by my side when I wake up. No other sight of it delights me so much as her shining brown hair upon waking; her curls that I can stroke until I am exhausted. And her eyes! My God! Her eyes; blue eyes of which I contemplate in amazement every setting and every rising. But also, the most effective of all the "blue pills"; I barely gulp them down with my eyes that I got a hard-on.

Yes, I am deeply in love with my wife, so what! I know, it's rare! But that's not my problem! It’s yours! Neener-neener-neener!". When I think of it, that I had to wait 45 years for all the sentimentalities I have always believed in, explode in my soul and finally take flesh. To finally understand what “finding your other half” means; this soul mate who, far from diminishing you, allows you to discover yourself completely, to be completely you, everything you expected to be. To be born to love like this. It's like that! My wife has become all my spring days, all the flowers in my eyes each time we reunite. "Our"; "We". I love so much to say the word "We" since "Us".

My chickadee nest does, however, have the advantage of being right next to my 82-year-old father's flat, that I will need to assist, doing the shopping, the housework, dealing with invoices etc. Usually I visit him every other day, when I leave the office nearby.

However, in the event of a growing epidemic and confinement, I will have to limit my visits to avoid bringing back germs to my father, while making myself available whenever necessary. I lost my mother owing to a stomach hurricane cancer last winter in Portugal, and I already have enough difficulty to mourn despite the distance I had with my progenitor. So I don't wanna lose my father, whom I am close to. This mere possibility worries me sick. I end up telling myself that I will decide at the last moment, depending on the conditions of the confinement. In the event of severe travel restrictions, I will opt for my landmark.

I tell my wife about my feelings. She agrees with me. Caressing my face, she said, "you'll see and decide accordingly."

For her part, my Darling must plan for the arrival of her two teenage daughters, in alternate custody, a week with their father, a week with her. How will it be during the lockdown? The two of us, lovingly confined, it’s sure to be delicious, but with two more teenage girls, it’s likely to get out of hand. Not that her daughters are not kind, on the contrary. Chacha the eldest and Titou the younger, are kids with the adorable sides of their mother, but they are nonetheless teenagers with tensions related to their age and those specific to their generation of egocentrics accustomed to all kinds of things facilities. How will they live in lockdown with us. In short, all this does not go without raising some concerns to be taken into account.

Parents and children. The forties are the blessed age when, while feeling so much freer than any of the previous ages, we forget ourselves enough to worry primarily about our parents and children.

And God knows I worry for my own children. They live with their mother in Brittany County, not far from the Morbihan viral cluster which draws attention about it for a few days and which torments them. I already spend every day mourning their distance and absence. But now, worrying remotely is real moral torture. One of the father’s function is to protect and reassure. But not being around them to do so is emotionally hard enough to bear. Furthermore, I had planned to visit them at the end of March. Just like they had to come to my house for the Easter school holidays. I feel this is all going to fall flat with a lockdown.

I literally enraged before letting go and taking a deep breath. After all, since my divorce from their slightly unstable mother, I have often told them that living is about adapting to change. "Life is only movement" as Montaigne said, or more recently Doctor Gerry Lane in the movie "World War Z". This reference often makes them laugh, "You're right, dad, we're not zombies." I reassure myself by telling me that we will call each other more often. We'll find ways to keep in touch and laugh together until we can kiss each other again.

While waiting to decide, I must therefore convince my Sweetheart to store toilet rolls.

She grants my request by one of her usual "what!", then she continues mockingly, throwing me a "but you only think about ass, good heavens!". I retort, laughing “Yes! I only think about yours! But in this case, it's more about ass paper!"

"Oh no! I refuse to enter into this logic of siege, to anticipate what might be missing because of a possible collective hysteria. I am a Parisian lady, an Intramural, and in Paris, not only anything has never missed, but I bet you that we will not miss anything", she laughs before continuing.

"And then, where do you want me to store in my three-room apartment, with a Parisian apartment fridge worthy of a mini-bar? It is made to contain a week of food, no more!  At last, it annoys me to do like the crowd. I'm not going to spar over cans of tuna on the shelves! I have a dignity!"

I tell her that's one of the reasons I love her so much, but we'll find, all the same, a place for some small tactical stocks that I'll be building up quietly in the next few days. To govern one's house, like a country, is to plan.

A week later, it is almost done.

When I learned that ibuprofen would be at the origin of the hospitalization of young patients with Covid and that the Advil would be prohibited, the acetaminophen being to be preferred, I tell myself that all our idiots will soon rush to pharmacies to raid the shelves of Tylenol. The idiot being predictable at least 48 hours in advance, I decide to plan two boxes each in case, taking them quietly, two packs here, two packs there, just to leave some to the others.

The next day, Tuesday March 10, when I leave the office, I realize that I did not take some Tylenol for my father. So I go into a pharmacy to buy him two boxes. In front of me, in the queue, is obviously a suburban bimbo with its stroller. When her turn comes, she orders a batch of nasal serums for the baby as well as eight boxes of Tylenol, telling the pharmacist "it is better to have some in reserve, it can be useful", all accompanied by small worried tremolos in the voice. The pharmacist, without batting an eyelid, wraps the eight boxes of medication, accompanying her gesture with a ruminating movement of the jaw.

My eyes widen as I say to myself, these people are as silly as the pharmacist is unable to put a stop to it. There are only two Tylenol boxes on the shelf. The suburban primate leaves. It's my turn. Ashamed to take the last two boxes of pills, I ask her for only one, telling myself that I will buy another elsewhere. The apothecary hands me the box saying "I must reorder it, it's going quickly today, I don't understand why", all while offering me the liveliness of the eye glow of a Charolais heifer. I take the tylenol for my dad and say "thank you" while wanting to drop a "you're a little dumb too, aren't you?".

Before I get to my old dad, I will find a drugstore where I will buy the second box. Another colorfully episode.

The pharmacy close to my dad's home has organized things well. They traced the ground on the sidewalk as well as inside the establishment, ensuring a physical distance of two meters between each client.

When I arrive, two people are in front of me. I have no one behind me for a minute. Then three people arrive. The last two follow the markings, but the one just behind me seems more drawn to my ass than to the need to keep one's distance. Add to that proximity, the heavy breathing of someone who has run. His hot breath hits the back of my neck.

The person in question is a tall African woman looking like Aya Nakamura, the Malian pop singer who is making a splash, to an audience made up of public school wastes, with her clips full of images made up to the last degree, and songs written in a suburban pidgin based on rumblings clearly indicating that her poop music can be listened to more with the ass than with the head.

I put her need to stick me, on my animal magnetism or on my muscular rump of Babtou (white-man in our french afro-suburban slang) with a twist of Bantu blood, which reminds her, perhaps, a familiar tribal allure mixed with some white exoticism. Except that now, my lack of celibacy and the sanitary climate do not lend to it. So I have anything but the urge to dance cloosely during an improvised Covid-party.

One of the customers in front having been served, a floor marking emerges in front of me. I move forward two meters, shaking off that close proximity as embarrassing as inappropriate. It wasn't counting on the mimicry of this cousin. She sticks me again so closely that I almost have her mist on the inside of my glasses.

My goodness! Perhaps, she's misting me with coronavirus! This is not good at all!” I said to myself, kissing my teeth like an angry African, and thinking of the safety of my relatives as well as the National Security (#LOL).

Turning to this piece of tape which refuses to get off my back, I allow myself to tell her, in a benevolent but firm tone: “Madame, don't see any offense, but if I want to maintain a certain physical distance, with respect markings on the ground, as well as the preventive measures, it is for some good reasons”.

The reaction of this sticky paper is somewhat disconcerting. My injunction in a language, obviously a little too formal, leaves her quiet,  in what looks like a real standing knockout, hands curled up on her chest, chin tilted to the side, and her gaze as dull as that of a carp remained too long on the stall of a fishmonger.

I really want to say her "don't shock yourself like this" but I'm afraid I will cause her a stroke. "Maybe I should have punctuated my sentence with one 'Yo' or two", I said to myself. I admonish myself by calling me "big bully", when the pharmacist, who has obviously witnessed the scene out of the corner of his eye, invites me to join him at the store checkout.

"Please, sir, come, it's your turn now", he said with a knowing smile that illuminates the delicacy of his Ethiopian facial features and whose white medical gown emphasizes the gracefulness of his African elven silhouette.

I join him, buy my box of Tylenol, and leave, throwing, a bit worried, a last look at the lady still frozen like a pillar of salt.

A statue with athletic shapes highlighted by a tight-fitting black leatherette jumpsuit and a white plush vest that covers her shoulders. A detail narrowly fails to make me burst out laughing. She wears white socks, matching the waistcoat, in black slides with two vamp straps covered in ridiculous white synthetic fur. "At least it's all right", I chuckle inwardly. The swimming-pool-sandals-&-white-socks, i.e. the height of bad Teutonic taste, which shows us that all is not perfect with our cousins from across the Rhine; bad taste made fashionable in our suburbs by an armada of influencers for Youdumbers. Enough to underline the definitively "horribilis" character of the "annus 2020".

Her gaze remains strangely frozen. Perhaps, she tells herself that she has just been, for the umpteenth time, the victim of an infamous racist attack. Unless she is "in her behavior" as Aya Nakamura sings cryptically, or ruminates on the " seum" (slang: a disarray mixed with acrimony) that my remark will have aroused in her.

While meditating on the psychological impact of sentences with subordonate clauses, I forget about this ready-to-wear dummy for suburbs, and say to myself "Mission accomplished!" I have my father's two boxes of Tylenol.

In the days that followed, as was to be expected, stockouts of Tylenol were to be deplored. The government, which waited for the shortage to react, decided to relocate the production of this drug to France in order to guarantee the health independence of our great and old nation.

Land of snooty morons !