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Volume 7, January 2005 |
ISSN 1538-893X |
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Living the Tuscan Dream
By
Peggy Jaffe,
Tuscany Institute |
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As
soon as I saw the other shoppers at the Montepulciano supermarket in pearls,
tailored suits and heels, I knew I was now living in a world with different
rules. As if to confirm this, a man in a boxy gray jacket, replenishing the
vegetable bins, sneered at me for grabbing a tomato with unfettered fingers. He
pointed to a stack of disposable gloves. It
was then I noticed the other shoppers donning them for selecting their produce.
After bagging a few plump tomatoes, some lettuce, and Granny Smith apples, and
discarding the mandatory glove on my right hand, I headed to the meat
department. I couldn’t believe my eyes – the butcher was carving beef with
his bare hands! Hunting
for canned soup, bags of ice and oatmeal turned up nothing. After a futile
search for matches, a clerk informed me only tobacco shops sell them, yet there
was fire starter for the barbecue amongst clothespins and detergent. The shelves
contained no diet foods unless Coca Cola Light counts. Nor was there a
"foreign foods" section. On
the other hand, pasta – thin, thick, straight and coiled – filled an entire
aisle. While
standing in the checkout line, instead of titillating tabloids to glance at, I
was diverted by colorful packets of condoms on the rack above the chewing gum.
Watching the other shoppers, I expected the checkout process to be a snap. But
halfway into the cashier scanning my items, she vanished with my lettuce
tomatoes, and apples. I could hear those behind me in line moaning – what
did I do wrong now? Later, I learned customers should weigh and affix a
price tag to their produce before coming to the cash register. Another surprise
was being charged for each grocery bag, without even a choice of plastic or
paper. The final jolt was paying the cashier, a simple matter if I’d
understood "chinkwantahtrayeuroaykwarantahahtoecentisimi" (53 euro, 48
cents)!
Wherever
Bruno drove me, be it to the nearest bus stop or the grocery store, his deaf,
black-spotted hound, Teresa, came along. She sprawled across the back seat while
we chatted. Teresa’s gentle disposition matched her master’s. "Brava,
brava,“ Bruno cheered, his droopy brown eyes glowing under thick gray
brows, as I tried to converse in Italian – he corrected my totally botched
attempts and then urged, “Coraggio, courage.” As
we rambled through landscapes reminiscent of Renaissance paintings, I understood
the grin etched on his leathery face.
When
I finally found a rental car with automatic transmission in Florence, Lucia
offered to take the train there with me and serve as my navigator for the drive
home. ”Change lanes! Turn right! Merge here!” she barked, flailing her arms,
her dark eyes widened in panic as I careened through the city center. Between
obeying her rapid commands, deciphering cockeyed road signs, and dodging
motorized sardine cans weaving in and out of self-made lanes, I thought I’d
have a stroke. Once
we reached a country road and I quit gasping, Lucia commented on my Peugeot
having automatic transmission. "There's not many auto like this in Italia; they're
for pigri, lazy, drivers,” she
grinned, baring a band of yellowed teeth. In
my case, I thought, better to be lazy
than maimed. The
first time I ventured out alone, I ended up in a labyrinth of dirt roads marked
only by a cattle-crossing sign. How
pleasing for the sky to meet the earth instead of endless roofs. Or where
structures stood, the words of Edith Wharton rang true: ".
. . picturesqueness which is never far to seek when Italian masonry and Italian
sunlight meet."
My
daily dilemma is what to do from one to four o’clock, when commerce comes to a
halt. three hours that could be
spent shopping, and I’m “grounded” – there’s nothing to do, nowhere to
go – everything is closed but restaurants. Unless I get an early start, I
prefer to shop in late afternoon rather than the pending lunch break impede my
momentum. Recently, an hour from home, reeling from shopping
interruptus, I coddled myself with a
lavish lunch. Looking around the half-empty, brightly lit dining room, I saw no
women, just stubble-faced men with their cell phones and Marlboros in easy
reach. Lingering between courses of
barley soup, linguini with clams, seafood kabobs, mixed salad, tiramisu and
espresso, I still faced 90minutes before commerce resumed. I
didn’t know governmental agencies shut down midday until I drove to Siena, the
provincial capital, for my residency visa. By time I found parking, huffed up
the steep, serpentine streets to the regional immigration office, catty-corner
to a magnificent black-and-white marble cathedral, and stood in an unruly queue
with other people clutching documents, a clerk announced the doors would close
shortly – at noon precisely – and reopen
for one hour at three, or was it four? – and then, only on Wednesdays, or was
it Thursdays? The
fact police stations also close midday was another surprise. When I went to the
Pienza carabinieri after lunch to
report receiving obscene phone calls, the doors were bolted. The sign indicated
the office reopened at four o’clock. Upon my return, an officer in a crisp
navy blue uniform took my report, pecking the information with two fingers on a
rackety manual typewriter. As I was leaving the stark chamber lined with dark
wooden file cabinets and maroon leather chairs, he remarked, “ You were
probably a target since names in the phone book beginning with ‘J’ are
foreigners.” I’d forgotten
there’s no “J” in the Italian alphabet--so
that explains the X-rated calls. Now, years later, I look back on the challenges that loomed so large as a newcomer. As far as grocery shopping, I move through the aisles like a native. Likewise, I drive as fearlessly as one, albeit with automatic transmission. Adapting to the three-hour midday pause remains a struggle, but piano, piano, slowly, slowly, as Bruno says, I may even get that right.
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