So far, we've got a sunny September and based on the dress code still on display, some natives are convinced it's still hot. And there's other stuff sizzling as we head into fall. Barely four days in and we've already got the makings of a crippling cricket scandal, a senior Tory sex scandal, the uproar over the Blair memoirs (which incidentally are literally zooming off bookshelves and onto Kindles) and Stephen Hawking's refuting his earlier granting of a window of opportunity for the existence of God. All that going on and the Pope still hasn't called in to cancel his mid-month visit to England.

Meanwhile, I am getting ready to send six people back to school and as this includes myself for another year, that familiar melange of doubt and terror is reforming in the pit of the mature student's stomach. With three of the five off to uni, this calls for some serious, orchestrated shopping because anyway you slice it, that's a lot of school shoes.
And while staring into this vortex, it occurred to me that I needed to concentrate on something I might have some modicum of control over.
I have concluded that I don't want to know anymore about any living, breathing, functioning people in authorized or unauthorized biography form. Tony Blair's opus, claimed by early readers to be astonishingly "self-relevatory", threw me over the edge.
These reputation and wallet restoring or depleting exercises are a drain on the collective energy. They are a temporary distraction, much like the slow reveal on that mosque at Ground Zero or Glenn Beck's end of summer "Honor Restoration" bid. Speaking of honorable, what must "honest Abe" (Lincoln) have pondered as he looked out from his Memorial perch last weekend? Of course, he himself would have been caricatured and lampooned by the press of the time but where he went on holiday, what he wore and his inside story remained his in all its un-download-able or photo-shoppable glory.

That song tells us that "We don't need another hero...". Maybe that's a good thing, now that all the layers of our modern day leader cum heroes have been peeled back in cringe inducing detail. We want to hold our hero's to the highest standards as they suffer laser beam scrutiny. But all that transparency isn't all it's cracked up to be. We are so keen to know everything about who we elect, while we manage to suspend disbelief. Our desire for their flawlessness is impaired by our imperfect, perilous hold on our own spinning plates.
We get annoyed with knowing all too well, that keeping those balls in the air without staff, fawning publicists, continuous ego stroking and other affectations is hard work. But when all that adulation hits the intended mark and our hero is convinced of his or her obvious superiority, they simultaneously become deeply aware of how that translates into power. After all the preening and the preciousness, it's all about the power.
But who has time to read all the rubbish out there anyway? Time to turn attention to things that truly matter.
Prime example, if I don't get moving, two of my kids will be going back to school in flip-flops....
-- Deborah Gale
Expatrriate Living














