Friday 13 November 2015

French Toast?

While I was in London, celebrating… actually I’m not sure celebrating is the right word, as I ‘celebrate’ way too often for it to be considered special anymore. Anyway, one night in London I went to a party at a building that, in my drunken mind, appeared to be St Paul’s Cathedral, although for all I know it might’ve been a dark and dirty alley. There was only a handful of people around me, and suddenly I was handed a wristband while someone whispered in my ear: ‘here – this will get you into the restricted areas…’. I started wandering around and walked into a few rooms where I found some old ladies selling random items from their homes to tourists. They were saying that those items were relics and vintage items when in reality, or at least to me, they just looked like their old and unloved crockery and other ‘rarities’. I carried on stumbling through the rooms, and came across a room where an old lady was hunched over her stove. The door had been ajar and I had assumed it was another room I could go into. I had heard someone in the background, or in my mind, saying ‘don’t go in there, she’s crazy’, but I didn’t listen. Curiosity killed the cat, but it didn’t kill me.
As soon as I walked in to this elusive room because the old lady inside was cooking something so I asked if I could help. She glanced over her shoulder in order to take in who the intruder was. She didn’t say anything for a while, then finally answered: ‘okay, fine, but don't talk and do as I say. You promise not to talk right?’. I just looked at her and nodded. She brought out some ingredients from the pantry for what I could only assume was French toast. She was a woman of few words and didn’t say much, but I could see from the stove that she’d just finished a batch of French toast. As she handed me the ingredients I began to question why she needed more of it. She was quite a petite lady and I couldn’t imagine she would be able to get through all of that food. Considering how drunk I was, I probably could’ve eaten both batches though… that is beside the point of course.
As I started to make the recipe she seemed frustrated and fidgety and said that I wasn't doing it the way her husband used to. So I started talking and asked what I needed to do so we could get the recipe right. She stood up abruptly and went back to the pantry from where she now emerged with some old French toast she had saved. I must have had a disgusted look on my face as she immediately stated: ‘This was the last batch my husband made before he passed’. She said this matter-of-factly, as if this statement was supposed to remove any feelings of nausea my face must have been transmitting. I didn’t say anything so she carried on: ‘the one you’re making needs to look like this’.
Once I’d had a long hard stare, my drunk mind coming to terms with the fact that I desperately needed to sober up to fully take in what was happened. The lady and I started chatting more. She seemed to live in her own world, a world in which her only purpose was to try and perfect this French toast. She admitted to me: ‘at my age it's so sad that I always live in my own head’. And I said: ‘no at my age it's worse. I should be off in the world living real life. Instead here I am wasting away my youth getting drunk out of my face. I mean, I probably won’t remember most of this when I wake up tomorrow morning’. Saying this immediately added to my increasing sobriety and I went on to tell her, ‘you being in your own world is actually kind of good. After years of acting logical and responsible for real life things, it is rare for someone your age to have such a child-like sense of wonder and imagination’. We then both sat there. Her living a fantasy life in which her aim was solely to recreate the perfect French toast recipe that reminded her of her husband and me outside of my head and connecting with another person but also thinking about how much my head was going to hurt the next day.

Thank you to Andrea Aguilar for the dreamspiration :)