Monthly Archives: October 2007

Come cry with me: Flying with kids

This is where it begins. Thousands of miles above the Pacific on a blue-skied day.

There are five of us, two adults, three children under 6, buckled in, wired for sound, and hurtling away from Melbourne toward a new life in Vancouver.

We are in economy: a curious experiment in human endurance. A space with its own rules, its own cocktail of air-borne diseases, and thrumming with a mutinous subcurrent by journey’s end.

An interesting phenomenon takes hold in the economy cabins of modern-day aircrafts. As ‘civilised’ as we claim to be, an anthropological undoing begins to take place as the hours tick by. We begin the flight respecting each other’s personal space, smiling courteously, making polite conversation, apologizing gently should our arm accidentally brush the arm of our neighbour on the no-man’s land of the armrest. We wait patiently for our meals and our turn in the toilet, and even begin to lovingly nest our personal belongings – creating a small and homely environment for ourselves that consists of one upright chair, an armrest, a vomit bag, and a mesh pocket.

Eight hours in, things are looking a little different. Tensions within the cabin are rising. The weak-bladdered are openly victimised as they excuse themselves yet again to push past their hostile neighbours to the toilet. Body odour begins to cross aisles and flare nostrils. Children fidget and squeal. The loud-voiced irritate the ear-drums. Sleepers who snore or suffer cranial lolling are shoved back into line. Jovial headset hummers are quickly silenced by reproachful glares. This is no place for happiness. This is limbo. Watch as the arm-rest transforms into No Man’s Land, occupied by both sides intermittently, fiercely held, then taken over by a quick insurgency during a toilet break.

The flight attendants are oblivious to the seated war, and coast the aisles like valium-fulled automatons, weak smiles, glassy eyes, dishing out water, sweeping away trays – giving us nothing human as we reach out for salvation. They arm themselves with trolleys – distant, unreachable, fleeting – then they are gone, to barricade themselves in the kitchen and conspire.

Meanwhile, we passengers begin to twitch and shiver as stomachs expand, the air con goes up, the lights go down and the cabin closes in around us. The hardcore plough through another meal, another movie – a mile-high mission. The well-traveled know that the coma of sleep is the only way to endure the hours, so don protective eye masks and assume an upright trance. The bookish get lost in the world of words between their hands. But for those of us with children, there is no escape. We know the time of darkness has come, and we sit in the half-light, trapped by the fact of our offspring, with nowhere to turn but inward.

Children and long-haul flights are an explosive mix – you can only fly for so long before the ante ups. Unlike most adults, very little children don’t want to wait for meals – they want to eat when they’re hungry. Very little children don’t know how to control their sphincters – they will go when they go, on the seat, in their pants, if they want to. And very little children don’t want to go to sleep even in their own beds, let alone when they’re upright, and when some arbitrary crossed time-zone sees the cabin lights suddenly dim and everyone around them assume sleeping pose. Children can see the absurdity of the airborne world. And they resist it with a vehemence.

This translates to screaming, yelling, hitting, seatbelt refusal, urinating, absconding into the aisles, spitting, intruding on the seat space of other passengers, sobbing, pinching, screaming, defecating, wailing, whingeing, hitting, yelling, sobbing ad infinitum.

A curious fact of airborne humanity – there is no sympathy, not one ounce, afforded to the parent of an exhausted child. The child – and their discordant symphony of sound, mind-blowingly intense in such a small space – is regarded as an evil being, an abberration, and the parent the evil master. If you try to meet a fellow passenger’s eye during the possessed child’s theatrics, they will look away. Either that, or they will fiercely eyeball you, channelling hatred and intolerance via iris transmission.

Save your energy. Don’t get angry. Tolerance is the tonic. Economy flights are tough for adults, but for little children with energy to burn and scant self-control, it is excruciating. So if the children on board are really bothering you, take action – do something nonviolent. Why not offer your help? Try and entertain them? Give the parents some acknowledgement – a look, a smile, a word or two that shows you understand – that they are little children – and it’s ok. Exercise your own self-control – distract yourself. Contemplate your anger. Compliment your neighour. Eat something. Enjoy your autonomy. Get lost in a movie. Laugh. And remember that, like all things, the moment will pass. Because you can rest assured that the parents, let alone their children, will be having a far worse time of it than you.

The fact is, although closely animal in their displays, children cannot travel in the hold. They are part of humanity, and in Economy, we humans are all in it together. That’s what you pay for – a usually safe, usually shit, journey to your destination. As the world gets smaller, and air travel becomes less of an adventure for the rich and a mere means of getting from A to B for the middleclass, like it or not, more and more children and babies will be airborne. And like it or not, children will continue to be seen and loudly heard on long-haul flights. Let’s hope we can evolve enough to make Economy a place for all.

5 hot tips for moving to Los Angeles (from Australia)

Before I moved to Los Angeles last year I had never been here, not even to hang at LAX. So in the three months between being offered a job and turning up I read and spoke to everyone who had lived in or visited the City of Angels.

No amount of advice prepared me for my first freeway interchange. I thought I was going to die as I merged from the 10 west to the 405 south all I could see was a sea of traffic lights with six lanes of traffic and I confess I let out a shriek of terror….

So anyway this advice helped me in my first few weeks:

1. Start driving it is true LA is a car town so get behind the wheel. Mapquest everything (check the box to avoid highways).

2. Listen to KCRW radio station, it makes those miles you will drive so much easier and Nick Harcourt’s morning becomes eclectic is simply the best music selection I have ever heard. If you join the station they have great ticket give aways and local business discounts.

3. Set up a postal address (I used my work address) and start working on your credit history as soon as you can it seems to impact everything – including gas bills, leases and banking. The simplest way to get credit is to apply for an AMEX card in Australia before you leave then call AMEX as you arrive and they will issue you a US one. Also many newcomers swear by Macy’s store cards. They will give them to anyone (and there is a discount on the day you sign up, great for bedding, etc)

4. Sign up for a cell phone. The plans are pretty good, look for lots of minutes and texts included. Watch the rates to OZ. All the plans make you sign up for two years so also check the penalties for breaking a plan.

5. Sit for your driver’s license. Having a license gives you some US identification and significantly reduces your car insurance costs. The handbook has an introduction from our illustrious Governator Arnold Schwarzenegger which gave me a thrill during an otherwise totally uninspiring experience. Nothing like reliving the horror of a driving test in my 30′s.

Good luck!

Next – 5 tips for Finding a place to live.

I still have two left feet

Many years ago I went to dancing class – in fact it was the Thursday late class in the local church hall. Very exciting stuff when you go to an all girls school. All the boys would line up on one side of the room, girls on the other. There was a truly agonising moment when you were not sure who you would get to dance with. The worst possible outcome was having to be partnered with the instructor. Absolutely uncool as a 16 years old girl.

Tonight I went along to Wolfson College for a salsa lesson. Perfect solution to what had been a long day. Oh my goodness! Nothing has changed. I still have two left feet and an inability to make my hips wiggle independently of the rest of my body and the girls and boys still line up on opposite sides of the room.

The last decade or more has reaped some benefits – the boys were less awkward about where to place their hands and I was not so worried about being uncool. Being able to laugh and enjoy being silly has to be one of the great benefits of our thirties.

While it was great fun I am not so sure I will be heading back to refine my hip wiggling anytime soon. I have no doubt that Cambridge will provide another new thing to try tomorrow that will generate just as much laughter.

A place to start

Starting I am sure is always the hardest part. Whether it is figuring out just where to begin on a blank computer screen (I have been staring at this one for a while), or embarking on a new adventure in a new town. It seems at the moment, everything is a start for me. And this is completely thrilling and just slightly terrifying!

Just a month ago I left a nice, safe and predictable job in the public health system in London for the unknown of an MBA at Judge Business School, Cambridge University. I was lucky enough to be offered a place in January 2007 so it has been a long wait to actually get here.

Cambridge is a beautiful and incredibly old town. The University itself has been around for over 800 years, having been founded by some Scholars who were escaping rioting in Oxford at the time. Well at least that is the version I have heard and certainly explains the ongoing rivalry between the two! The structure is completely different from an Australian University as it is actually a collection of colleges. The oldest being Peterhouse which was formed in 1284. My college is Queens’ College which is one of the older ones down on the Cam. There are many traditions attached to the colleges and Cambridge University including Formal Halls (when members of the college are required to where Academic Gowns for dinner), rowing and punting.

So not only am I starting in a new town I am also starting new friendships, battling with academic subjects that I have never encountered before and learning a whole other language. In the last week I have been introduced to the delights of switchers, spreadsheets, balance sheets and some curious thing called NPV. It is looking like it is going to be a challenging year!

Introducing Singapore Girl

So there I was, nearly seven months pregnant at my own good bye party, with an overwhelming sense of déjà vu. About six months before my husband, James, our then one year old son and I had returned home for good, or so we thought, ready to find the big family home, expand our family and settle down into a comfortable Australian existence. But there we were, saying so long to family and friends, and once again heading off into the blue and a life overseas.

For 10 of the last 15 years I have lived outside of Australia. In Oxford, London, New York and Tokyo I made a life for myself, drawn, at different times, by study, work, adventure and love. This time we were heading off to Singapore, leaving behind our beloved Melbourne, for a mixture of professional and private reasons.

After a dramatic start (James in London, early labour, very sick baby) we found that we love living here in Singapore. For an Australian family with young children who wants to return home regularly you could not find a more prefect place to live. James loves his job, we have lots of help, the weather is always warm, you are spoilt for choice of tropical beaches and it is not much further from Melbourne than Perth.

My needs are more prosaic than when I was in my 20s, but I have found myself to be more content and relaxed than at any time in my life. Viva la Singapura!

An ode to Melbourne

Living in LA with its endless sunshine it is easy to forget how an unexpected sunny day can put you in such a good mood.

“I saw you the other day. It was a nice day, I was out and about, walking in the city, getting on and off trams, going into shops, sitting on a bench. It was the kind of day when every face that passed came from somewhere, was going somewhere else, no longer a mask but a personality. It was the kind of day when the light was kind, and the breeze was sugary, and there was time for looking, as I waited for a tram, as I walked in the park, as I passed you in the street.

Here is the full article the journo watches a girl trail through Melbourne in all is ‘superficial’ sunshine-bathed glory. I really miss catching trams. Los Angeles’ streetcars system was torn up by General Motors in the 1950′s.

Introducing Lis in LA

About a year ago I left Melbourne to work and live in a new city – Los Angeles. It has been a fabulous year, there is nothing like uprooting your world to make you re-evaluate what is important in life and to experience the highs of new discoveries.

As I head into the next year of being a Southern Californian I thought it was time to reflect on what it means to be an Australian so far away from home living in the city of angels and blogging seems like the natural progression.

I came to LA to follow a dream (someone else’s dream) to start Moonlight Cinema in ten or so cities across the US. For nearly a year I buzzed around the States taking meetings and speaking in school halls with the aim of securing five or so parks to screen movies in this summer.

I had a ball doing business in a new place, without a doubt the Australian accent helped. At the end of a major presentation in Philly I was asked to ‘say G’day’ to the assembled crowd. I have also been asked by my chiropractor to say ‘a dingo stole my baby’. Often the crowd think I am British.

I love the new vocab I am now peppering my sentences with – “I circle back to you” and the great respect for process in business. I love the openness and curiosity of the people I meet, so quick to offer help and advice. Always keen to know what brought you to the US and what you think.

One of my favourite views of LA the 405 freeway on a Friday night from the Getty.