Yet another Ireland entry. They’re all so embarrassing and teenager-ish that it’s hard to choose. But here’s the latest.
IRELAND
We started off for Dublin and I am SO excited!!! I CAN’T WAIT!!!!! YIPPEE!!! [Ed: I do not believe there is a font large enough to imitate what that looks like in my journal. Continue.] The drive was long but FINALLY WE CAME INTO THE CITY!!!! [See previous note.] Oh, I love the city! It was exactly like New York but with no skyscrapers. The traffic was terrible, but it gave us plenty of time to look around. People – kids – everyone was out – trillions of college kids. [I believe my rapture here is due to the fact that we had spent so much time out in the Wild West, and I had so had it with seeing Abbeys and monasteries. I’m guessing here, but I think that’s what’s going on here.]
Dad pointed out Trinity College and St. Stephen’s Green. We finally found a place to park, we paid the parking meter, and walked off for St. Stephen’s. Mum said it was gorgeous. We walked down the sidewalk looking at everything.
I saw the most incredible punk couple [Ha. I was ALL ABOUT being “punk” – only it was such a watered-down American version as to have absolutely nothing to do with the “real thing”. So I felt like, whenever I saw kids with mohawks and safety pins and stuff – IN IRELAND – I was confronted with the genesis of the movement.] She had safety pins through her hand, earrings in her nose, and a bleached mohawk.
When we went through the iron gates into the green, it was — oh, it was so so beautiful. All shady with all the college kids lying around sleeping, and we came to a stream with mallards and Siobhan immediately sat down to watch. There was a gazebo beside the stream (not as nice as the one in Adare BY FAR.) [Ha ha. Listen to me. Judging the gazebos.] I passed around it, trying to find an opening in the wooden fence so I could get in, and I tripped on a MICROSCOPIC iron stake and fell on my face. [Damn, I hate those microscopic iron stakes.] A whole group of jerky girls started to roar with laughter but some college guy helped me up. OH, I was so so so embarrassed! [Ehm, I’m embarrassed right now, reading about my own embarrassment.] I still blush thinking about it. How dorky I must have looked. It’s awful.
We walked along the stream and we came into another part of the park – a sunny stretch of grass with a big fountain and flower gardens. I wish I was a poet so I could put it into words! [And then I proceed to put it into words anyway.] Rows of yellow tulips with small violet flowers in front. Red and orange tulips arranged with velvety maroon flowers weaving in and out. They were just incredible. I have never seen so many perfect gorgeous flowers in my life. Some yellow ones, pink tulips – I could have looked at them all day.
We sat by the fountain. Siobhan wanted to take a swim.
We got up again and walked on the winding path past three roaring crying ladies and then went down a lane with trees overarching us and college kids lying on blankets with books. [I am shaking with laughter right now. Who were the “three roaring crying ladies”?? Were they roaring with laughter, I hope? I don’t think they just staggered down the path in St. Stephen’s Green, roaring with sobs in public. ]
When we neared the gate leading out into the big hustle-bustle city, Siobhan didn’t want to go. But she was good about it. [Oh, little Siobhan! She was four!!] When we came out we decided to find a place to have lunch. We hadn’t found a B&B yet, but we were all starving. We found a coffee shop that looked relatively normal on the outside. Well, I took my tray with two raisin scones on it, and stared down the stairs. When I came to the bottom I came out into a plush, dim, orange-tinted room with one of those silver balls of light twirling around and bar stools and mirrors on all the walls and low tables and couches and strange lights flashing!!! I went, “OH MY GOD.” I was in shock. I was in a bar! [My innocence touches me, weirdly.]
We slowly sat down on a maroon velvet couch by a low table with three bar stools. It was so dim in there, it was hard to see. Siobhan kept saying, “I can’t see my food!” [The image of Siobhan is killing me here!!] My scones were delicious although I picked out all the raisins. [HAHAHA]
It was all rather bizarre and I was glad to get out of there.
While Mum took Jean and Siobhan to the bathroom, me, Dad and Bren crossed the street to watch a cricket game. It was really strange and they wore white dickies [HA! Dickies! What a word from the past.], and vests, and everything! When Mum, Jean, and Siobhan came out, we walked around for a while and passed the college and Mum told me about the Book of Kells.
When we got back to our car, we got in and went off to find a B&B. It was the most maddening search. There just didn’t seem to be one single B&B in all of Dublin. I swear, we drove around for an hour and a half, and Dad went to the outskirts of Dublin and I didn’t want to stay there! No city!!! [I think what I mean by “no city” is exactly the opposite. I wanted to stay IN the city. Hmm. I am sure I was a huge brat during the search. I can feel it in the prose. Sorry, Mum and Dad. ] We still couldn’t find one and we were all getting extremely bored and tired.
I was getting worried because the big Eurovision song contest was on tonight at 8:00 and I didn’t want to miss it although it was only like 4:30. [This is so feckin’ hilarious. Jean?? “Dah after dah”? My sister Jean and I were absolutely OBSESSED with the Eurovision song contest.]
Well. Heave a sigh! [Uhm – who ya’ talkin’ to, Sheila?] We finally found one!! The Oslo House, a big brick B&B on a nice residential street not far from Phoenix Park. And Dad said it’s not a far bus ride into Dublin at all. [To appease his bratty teenage daughter who wanted to be among the “punk” people in the city.] And the B&B seems really nice and I have my own huge double bed all to myself! What luxury!
We hung around for a while. I read so much History that I got bags under my eyes. (Slight exaggeration). [Ha. Thanks for letting us know that, you 13 year old girl.]
After a while, we decided to walk down to Phoenix Park. Mum said that it was like Central Park, in that it was huge. It was huge and it was gorgeous – at least the tiny bit I saw of it. There was a playground that Siobhan adored [Again – the image of Siobhan on this trip is killing me!], and when she finished see-sawing, we went up these stone steps (shady) lined with vines, trees, and big bushes, and we came out to a hill with a house on it, surrounded by trees. We walked past that and came out to an ENORMOUS FIELD scattered with benches and amazing flower arrangements. [Uh oh. Here we go again.] Tulips of this lemon yellow color I have never seen before and pink and orange tulips, and yellow flowers that almost shined. It was so beautiful.
The sun was just going down and Mum and Dad got into a conversation with this weird guy. I went down to look at the swans. Oh, they were gorgeous. This proud father glided around the pond, and the mother sat on her eggs on this huge nest. We pet this cute black dog, and we went down to the zoo but it wasn’t opened so we came back and Mum bought me some new batteries. Isn’t she wonderful? [Mum. I apologize for how many times I needed you to “get batteries” for me. I was clearly a lunatic and should have been in an institution. I was fixated on batteries. I am crying with laughter right now. I am “roaring and crying” perhaps?]
When we got home, I did some more homework and then we watched the contest and I taped it. It was terrific!
[Now here’s the deal with the Eurovision Song Contest. Countries from – duh – all over Europe are represented. Music groups from all over the feckin’ place compete. Some of them speak English, but most do not. Hence – most of the songs that Jean and I loved were not sung in English, and yet we got to know the sound of the lyrics anyway, and would sing along, in our gibberish-sounding made-up version of Greek, or German, or whatever. So that should explain the bizarre next paragraph.]
My favorite songs are Mona ya Guppy from Cypress and Dah after Dah from Sweden. I also liked One Step Further (England) and En Beyshen Freeden (Germany). Germany won and I was thrilled. The girl was 17 and she was so happy!!! [And so began my life-long love of awards shows of any kind. Bring ’em on. Wish I could see award shows every day.] The song means “A Little Peace” and it was really touching. She sang it again in 7 languages, and everyone clapped whenever she switched languages. Shivers ran up and down my back!
I always feel like crying whenever someone has people cheering for them. [Again. This is why I love awards shows. And the Olympics. I still “feel like crying whenever someone has people cheering for them”.] I cried at Charles and Di’s wedding when they came out on the balcony. I couldn’t help it! [Holy crap. That’s tragic. ]
It was a terrific night and day.
Another hilarious Friday diary, Sheila. Thanks!
And I’d forgotten “A Little Peace”.. what was that girl’s name? The song went on to be a number one in (at least) 7 countries in Europe *ahem*.. Oh and the Eurovision.. countries from all over Europe.. and Israel – Dana International?
“Norway… Nul Point!”
Ummm…..whoa.
That was filled with so many cool images, I don’t even know where to start.
First of all, the thing that really stuck out for me was the fact that you were 13 years old, and you read “so much history”, that you got bags under your eyes. You were 13 YEARS OLD!! I don’t even want to get into what the heck I was doing when I was 13, but it certainly had nothing to do with reading history.
I love the Punk images, it brought me way, way back.
The whole entry is so great because it’s so filled with energy and wonderment. I felt like I was down the rabbit hole for the first time, you know? Like it was all so much, that it was almost impossible to explain.
I also love the fact that some “jerky girls” laughed and giggled when you tripped. I sooooo get Jerky Girls, I can’t even tell you. I SO get that, Sheila.
Great post. I have to read it again.
Pete:
Do they still do the Eurovision contest? If I’m not mistaken, didn’t Riverdance start as a 10-minute dance piece on the program?
Jean and I LOVED the chick from Cypress and still can sing the chorus of her song called – ahem – “mona ya guppy”??? what??
Alex:
Nothing’s worse than a group of “jerky girls” who laugh when you trip over those dern “microscopic iron stakes” ambushing you left and right.
But life is wonderful when a nice Irish college boy helps you up.
Oh yeah.. Eurovision is alive and well.
And, yes, as I recall, Riverdance the show was created after they did a dance segment one of the many, many times Ireland hosted Eurovision.. and Hothouse Flowers owe their career to appearing in the interval of one year’s contest – they were also better than any of the contestants.
The winning country earns the right to host the event the following year. For a while Ireland owned that damn contest.. there is a rumour that we deliberately put up a weak song just to get rid of it (and the cost of hosting it).
Peteb: That’s so funny. So Irish!
“Here, give ’em THIS so we can back to normal life, jaysus.”
“exactly like New York but with no skyscrapers”? That’s funny.
Heh heh.. the BBC commentator, on I think EVERY Eurovision, is an Irish-born DJ, Terry Wogan.. who spends the entire show laughing at the announcers, the contestants, the songs, etc etc – but in a “Greatest Eurovision Fan EVER” kind of way..
For several years he would start every Eurovision broadcast in the same way.. “And here we are back in Dublin..”
annika:
hahahaha
peteb:
HAHAHAHAHAHA
“Ein bisschen Frieden”, cool–your translation closed the circuit for my high-school German. Clever of you to have written them phonetically.
Ken – Ha! I spoke French, not a word of German … so I had no idea what was going on!
I am sure that “Mona ya guppy” is completely incorrect – but my sister and I loved that song the best. I’d love to know what she was actually saying. What do they speak on Cypress? Turkish and Greek, I imagine? I have no idea.
Anyway – I can hear that song now, and I bet my sister Jean is singing along from whereever she is:
Mona ya gup-py
Mona ya gup-py …
Everytime you write Jaysus, it reminds me of a three-year-old Irish girl who was visiting Chicago with her mother. They’d spent the night at my friend’s place, sleeping on her hide-a-bed. When my friend started to fold the bed back, a scream came from within the couch. The little girl, in her heavy Irish accent declared, “The cat’s in the couch! Jaysus!”
it’s funny–even i can remember the tune and words to “mona ya guppy” and “dah after dah” b/c you and jean sang it in the car so much! the harmonies on “dah after dah” you guys did (“cuz i know where i am going”part) were particularly memorable, from a 4 year old’s perspective. even though i seemed to be focused on mallards, playgrounds and being scared of the city!! cut to 15 years later and i’m living by phoenix park! and working at that god-awful cafe called the pheonix “perk”.
this was a great diary friday!
Isn’t that wild, siobhan? To remember your 4 year old self … and then flash-forward to your adult self? In the same spot?
Love it. :)