Ta-Ta,
London. Hello, Awesome.
By SARAH LYALL
Published: August 17, 2013 117 Comments
EVEN after 18 years, I never really knew where I stood with the English.
Why did they keep apologizing? (Were they truly sorry?) Why were they so
unenthusiastic about enthusiasm? Why was their Parliament full of classically
educated grown-ups masquerading as unruly schoolchildren?
Why did rain surprise them? Why were they still obsessed by the Nazis? Why
were they so rude about Scotland and Wales, when they all belonged to the same,
very small country? And — this was the hardest question of all — what lay
beneath their default social style, an indecipherable mille-feuille of
politeness, awkwardness, embarrassment, irony, self-deprecation, arrogance,
defensiveness and deflective humor?
Now that my spell as a foreign correspondent for The New York Times has
ended and I’ve come back home — if a place counts as home when you’ve been away
for so long — I’ve had some time to think about how Britain and America have
changed, and how I have.
When I got to London, it was a calmer time. The only terrorists anyone
worried about were the ones from Ireland. Margaret Thatcher’s Conservative
revolution was winding down. Princess Diana had yet to reveal that there were
three people in her marriage. David Beckham had yet to learn that he could make
extra money by posing alluringly in his underpants
I resolved to hang on to my own accent, mainly by watching a lot of
American TV, and to assimilate as best I could while remembering where I came
from. What happens then is that you begin to see through the looking glass from
both sides. I began to understand how America appeared from 3,000 miles away —
not just the things Britons admired, but the things they didn’t.
And so a country where even Conservatives are proud of the nationalized
health service cannot comprehend a system that leaves tens of millions of
people unable to afford basic health care. A country that all but banned guns
after the slaughter of 16 small children in Scotland in 1996 cannot understand
why some Americans’ response to mass shootings is to argue for more gun rights,
not fewer.
Britons admire and consume American culture, but feel threatened by and
angry at its excesses and global dominance. They are both envious and
suspicious of Americans’ ease and confidence in themselves. They want American
approval but feel bad about seeking it. Like a teenager worried that his more
popular friend is using him for extra math help but will snub him in the
cafeteria, they are unduly exercised by the “special relationship”.
Also, Britons are not automatically impressed by what I always thought were
attractive American qualities — straightforwardness, openness, can-doism, for
starters — and they suspect that our surface friendly optimism might possibly
be fake. (I suspect that sometimes they might possibly be right.) Once, in an
experiment designed to illustrate Britons’ unease with the way Americans
introduce themselves in social situations (in Britain, you’re supposed to wait
for the host to do it), I got a friend at a party we were having to go up to a
man he had never met. “Hi, I’m Stephen Bayley,” my friend said, sticking out
his hand.
“Is that supposed to be some sort of joke?” the man responded.
Sometimes in London I felt stupidly enthusiastic, like a Labrador puppy let
loose in an antique store, or overly loud and gauche, like a guest who shows up
at a memorial service wearing a Hawaiian shirt and traumatizes the mourners
with intrusive personal questions.
Britain became more American while I lived there — everyone did, thanks to
the Internet and the global economy. By this spring, 25 percent of the adult
population was obese, and doctors were calling the country “the fat man of
Europe.”
But the British character lay underneath it all, and that never changed.
Many of the stories I covered had to do with the question Britons have asked
themselves incessantly since their empire fell: Who are we, and what is our
place in the world? It wasn’t until the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games
last summer, with its music medleys and dancing nurses and quotes from
Shakespeare and references to Mary Poppins and sly inclusion of the queen and
depictions of the Industrial Revolution and compendiums of key moments in
British television history, that the country seemed to have found some sort of
answer.
It was a bold, ecstatic celebration of all sorts of things — individuality,
creativity, quirkiness, sense of humor, playfulness, rebelliousness and
competence in the face of potential chaos — and more than anything I have ever
seen, it seemed to sum up what was great about Britain.
AMERICA has always been secure about its place in the world, though its
self-belief is fraying a bit. But while Britain was figuring itself out,
America was changing, too.
I’ve come back often, so it’s not like it was a total shock. But while I
wasn’t paying attention, Arizona for some reason got its own Major League
Baseball team. New York City’s center of gravity shifted to Brooklyn, at least
according to the people who live in Brooklyn.
In other developments, available phone numbers ran out, forcing the
introduction of unpleasant new area codes. “Awesome” went from being a risible
word used only by stoners and surfers to an acceptably ubiquitous modifier, the
Starbucks of adjectives.
The Kardashians arrived and would not leave.
After years of using pound and euro coins, I find dollar bills cumbersome
and idiotic. After years of living happily among Britons who by New York
standards would be considered functioning alcoholics, I now find my old
friends’ tendency to order wine by the glass, not the bottle, unnecessarily
Puritanical.
I’ve grown accustomed to British friends who, when it comes to personal
matters, don’t ask much, don’t tell much and really, really, don’t want to get
into it. We lived for more than 15 years next to a couple who corresponded with
us almost exclusively by letter. I have become an expert in the art of the
anodyne weather discussion. I’m chronically sorry.
“Sorry,” I said to a Metro-North conductor the other day, when I disrupted
the swift completion of his progression through the train by asking what time
we would get to my stop. “No problem,” he said, looking surprised at my
apology, and so I apologized again, for apologizing.
It is enough to make your head spin. There I was at the Apple store the
other day, asking basic technical questions and trying not to take up too much
of anyone’s mental space. I told the salesclerk that I had to change my
address, since I’d just moved back.
He asked me a million questions: Why? Where was I going to live? How about
my family? How did I feel?
He considered the whole thing for a moment — me, the move, New York, life.
“Awesome!” he said. And I think he really meant it.
-Sarah Lyall is a writer at large for The New York Times and the author of
“The Anglo Files: A Field Guide to the British.”
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