Sentimental Tuesday questions, Hirokazu Koreeda edition
I suspect I would have liked Coldplay’s song “Clocks” in any case. The chiming piano chords at the beginning would probably have hooked me the first time I heard it. (I’m a sucker for that kind of sound.) Toss in the lyrics that evoke coming home after troubled times and I’m sold.
I would almost certainly have liked it anyway.
But as it happens the first time I heard those opening chords was in a video made to promote a summer camp where I used to volunteer. This particular camp was for children and families affected by HIV/AIDS. I was part of the infirmary staff.
It was easily my favorite place on earth. The week I would work there was the single best week of my year.
In the video the camp director addresses the camera and talks about the mission of the place, what’s it’s meant to provide for the people who come. As she speaks, those opening chords play in the background. When the music swells, the visuals shift to a montage of images from the camp. And then it transitions to clips of the campers having fun, counselors talking, etc.
Friends, Pavlov himself could not have designed a tidier study or found a more perfect example of conditioned responses than Yours Truly. For months after I first saw that video, all it would take was hearing the opening bars of “Clocks” to make my face go all scrunchy and my throat constrict to straw-like proportions. Considering how popular the tune was, for a while this phenomenon occurred with distressing frequency. Thankfully, the effect has waned over the years, and now I only get choked up about 30% of the time when I hear it.
So…
Suppose a God, roughly analogous to the Big White-haired Man Sitting on a Cloud so commonly depicted. Further, suppose that Dante was pretty accurate at the end of Purgatorio, and that everyone goes to heaven by way of an Earthly Paradise. (Sadly for him, he was totally wrong about Inferno, because it turns out that God isn’t keen on tormenting people for eternity and it doesn’t actually exist.) Finally, suppose that God really is as wonderful as all the nice parts of the world’s religions say, and lets everyone design their own personal version of the Earthly Paradise that holds heaven’s gate.
Mine would look like a campground about an hour outside of New York City. There’s a small pond and a swimming pool and a flagpole that leans a bit to the side. St. Peter has been temporarily replaced by a woman with sandy blond hair who runs the place with a perfect combination of giddiness, compassion and competence. And somewhere in the background the opening chords of “Clocks” are playing.
What would yours be like?
Russ,
Is this the space where we will be spending eternity? Or the road we will traverse to reach it?
If it is the latter… mine would look like the player tunnel leading out to the field for the Super Bowl. I’d be wearing a dark green Eagles jersey, with #20* emblazoned across the front. My teammates would be lining the tunnel… though in reality, they would be my friends, family, and loved ones. The announcers would call my name and I’d sprint out of the tunnel, my teammates trailing behind. We’d gather in a circle, I’d say something wildly inspirational and do some energizing dance, and we’d sprint through the pearly gates. Gratuitous ass slapping would ensue**.
* Unretired with Mr. Dawkins’ special permission
** I’m tempted to joke that our otherwise wildly divergent answers might have this part in common.Report
Yes. The latter.
What happens Next is anyone’s guess. But you get to pick what your last glimpse of Earth will look like. (And, heck, I’ll bend the rules to let you come back and visit this one spot as often as you like, in whatever company you choose.)Report
A high mountain valley with a big lake and waterfalls cascading down the mountains, where we all live in cozy rustic cabins and hang out by the campfire every night drinking and having companionable conversations.Report
Probably look something like this. South of Menomonie WI. Not far from where Neil Gaiman lives.Report
Alpha Plus for the Koreeda Hirokazu shout-out. Though a variant.
Something similar to yours but not an hour out of NYC (that is too far). I think the weather would approximate 6-8 months of high autumn (temperatures in the mid-50s with full leaves turning) 2-3 months of June perfection, and the remainder being early winter. I would live in a Brooklyn brownstone or in some colonial in an arty-college town that is close to NYC (think Bronxville or a NYACK or Rhinebeck that is closer to NYC). Plus there would be a library with all the books and movies in the world ever made and new additions are constantly coming in from the real world. There would be the theatre greats still performing. Plus easy transport to London, Paris, and Tokyo and the great museums of the world.
Why not go big? 🙂
Yes I really am a sentimental sap. Just one with exceedingly good taste* 🙂
*No Thomas KincadeReport
@newdealer and @russell-saunders
I live just about an hour northwest of NYC. I don’t have all the amenities the two of you described, but you both are welcome at Casa de Kazzy anytime.Report
@newdealer I thought you might like the reference. And yes, I did modify things just a bit.
@kazzy You know I am totally looking forward to finally getting to sit down with you, drink a beer and watch some kind of sporting event on television.Report
Soon, good friend. Soon.Report
One of those open house parties we have once or twice a year.
One where family and friends are practically pouring out the front and back door, the food has turned out just right, and the drinks are flowing. Every time you turn around you run into some person you hadn’t yet known was there, and you shake hands or embrace, catch up on their lives and remember with an almost intimate affection why you were drawn to this person’s sphere in the first place. There’s laughter and loud talking and arguing and bragging and praising and condolences and love and – of course – the music. Always, the music.
The inferno, of course, would be the picking up afterwards.Report
I find the inferno to be that hour before the party… when no one has yet arrived but I have finished making all preparations. I usually get so excited to host parties that I’m up early and prepped well-ahead of time (though Zazzy usually points out things I hadn’t yet done… like restock toilet paper in the bathroom… who has time for that when their are Italian party shorts to iron?). So I’m usually ready with about 45 minutes to go and sit there, waiting anxiously, wondering if I should have a drink or 3 before people arrive or if this signals a drinking problem… hoping my friends show up before her friends so we can wrangle control off the music.
The calm before the storm is unbearable. LET’S JUST PARTY ALREADY! I find the cleanup surprisingly tolerable.Report
I was just reminiscing with a friend of mine about one the best parties we ever went to. It started as a bunch of people going over to a friend’s house the day after a huge party to help clean up…that turned into a party. It essentially had self-selected for the kind of friends who would come over to help clean up, haul all the empty bottles to the recycling center, mop the kitchen floor, pick up any bottles and glasses (or pieces thereof) perched in odd places around the house and garden, etc. I think it transition from clean up to party started when someone put on some music to accompany the cleaning….and then someone opened a beer from the extras in the refrigerator…Report
Not so very long ago I had quite a lovely time with two wonderful friends who helped me tidy up after I had a party in my house. (You know who you are.) It was one of my favorite parts of the day, which had been rather a special day all told.Report
I already live in this special place, Western Maine. Right about now, it’s all turned golden.Report
Here’s a taste.Report
that was so coolReport
Growing up, there was a fountain at the corner of Sparks and Kent (in Ottawa) that was right beside my church. It wasn’t much, but while waiting for church to start, we’d be out there running on and across it. It was torn down 10 or 15 years ago, and probably for good reason. In retrospect, it was pretty ugly and now the street (which is a pedestrian mall) is more open. But I guess that’d be it; running around, on and across that fountain.
And we’d all be kids… because we are.Report
Canada? [snort]Report
Dude. Philadelphia?Report
Hey… I’m not from Philadelphia. I just root for their football team.Report
You’re not helping your case, Kazzy.Report
Mt. St. Helens prior to the eruption.Report
But, like, quite a while before the eruption… right?Report
I had sort of assumed so.Report
At least an hourReport
Originally, yes, but given your comment, I’d think it be cool to be where those pictures were taken during the eruption-at least once. Since I’m dead, I think it would be interresting to be “in the storm” so to speak and experience that type of power firsthand.Report
The high desert of New Mexico in late spring, when the Sun warms and the thin breeze cools, and at night, you can see Infinity above you. The main difference between this real place from my past and my paradise? Many more friends and family nearby.Report
Obligatory:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B3jYO0TKcm4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hEJzXbqyU8A
Report
Something like this: http://uncyclopedia.wikia.com/wiki/File:Rock_Climbing.jpgReport
I would have it look like Yosemite Valley, in spring following a snowy winter, with the waterfalls in full flood. The sun’s rays turn the falls to the color of beaten copper, the sky is sapphire, and the valley floor is the color of an emerald.
Full-on Eisenstadt.Report
The Rue Daguerre in Paris, a very nice neighborhood market street with a great selection of artisan food vendors, cafés, restaurants, and bars. One of the places where you can truly shop in the old-fashioned way, and the merchants know just about everything about the products they sell.
Probably the best dreams I have are all variations on shopping in the market streets of Paris.Report
Don’t forget the health-care and enforced 35-hour a week rule and ample nationally-enforced vacation 🙂Report
It would be patterned after the dormitory quadrangle at my alma mater. That’s not due to an attachment to college, but that place was just magical.Report
I dispute that.Report
I’ve given this a lot of thought, and I’m torn between three. So I’ll just give all three, in no particular order:
1. Dawn on a Sunday in late April at my alma mater in upstate New York. Despite having partied all night, the alcohol is mostly worn off for the die-hards still standing. The rising sun is hitting the golden top of the bell tower on the chapel and the mist is rising from the lake at the bottom of the hill. “Amazing Grace” is playing on the bagpipes in the background.
2. Bouzy, France (http://www.france-voyage.com/towns/bouzy-18039.htm). Everyone’s English would still be as mediocre and stilted as my French, yet we’d understand each other perfectly well just the same. The champagne, of course, would be flowing freely.
3. Virgin Gorda, on the trail between the Baths and the ironically named Devil’s Bay, just not on a day when the cruise ships are around: http://wikitravel.org/en/File:The_Baths.jpgReport
My favourite city in Europe: Vevey. Milk chocolate was invented there.Report
Was your alma mater gorges?Report
Nope. I’ve left clues over the years if you want to look closely, though.Report
Rochester? Hobart? Alfred? Colgate?Report
Man, I love wafting, ghostly bagpipes in the fog.Report
Pre-marriage, it was in the last few moments at the dinky little restaurant after we’d turned off the “OPEN” sign. One (sometimes two!) of the tables would have ordered a bottle of wine that they didn’t drink much from and we’d be splitting two or three glasses of wine between those of us who had stayed this late. I’d sit down with a basket of baguette heels (THE BEST PART) and a glass of wine and one of the entrees that the boss had made just a little too much of and do the numbers for the night on what I suspected was a second set of books and the waitress (one in particular) would lean over to clean my (already clean) table and lean in a little too close and smell like fruit tree blossoms. We’d make gentle flirty conversation after feeding more than a hundred people that night. The numbers would be good. And tomorrow would be exactly the same.
Post-marriage, it’s pretty much a Saturday during Christmas Break. It’s chilly, but not cold, in the basement… good temperatures for wearing hoodies and fuzzy pants and slippers… and the cats are walking around us and falling asleep in the blankets we throw across ourselves as we nibble on our hot sandwiches and we sip our various drinks and watch our various shows (and the shows are so good that we finish one and say “do you want to watch the next one?” and we both do) and we know that we don’t have to do anything tomorrow either.Report
Oh, and I imagine I could sneak out for a smoke if I wanted to.Report
The first sounds nice in its way, but the second sounds like bliss.Report
I’m sure you’re familiar with “Heaven is a wedding”, this was kinda like that only a bit more low-key. To be surrounded by delicious food, to be surrounded by delicious wine, to be surrounded by beautiful people… both the co-workers and the customers, and to all be working together to feed cranky people and watch them transform before your very eyes into happy people was like falling in puppy love every day.
The smells, dude. Imagine a world where everything smelled like something you very much wanted to start gnawing on.
I don’t know how much of that was the whole “being 20 around people who were being 20” thing but… dang.
Plus the music was very, very good.Report
My pre-marriage paradise would be Tea Hill Beach (PEI) in August, without anyone else there, but knowing that all my most-loved ones were just up the hill in my Poppy’s house, waiting for me, whenever I was ready to leave the shore.
Nowadays I would be most pleased in Jay’s paradise, but I would like there to be all my favorite books on the shelves and some bright and geometric needlework to keep my hands busy. Also, a door where if you go outside, it opens onto this one particular Narnian spot in New Zealand (north of Wellington), where the hillside is Steep Steep above your head (very close to being a cliff) and the ocean is *right there* next to the road. I suspect that road would be the road to Heaven proper, for me – and the pang of the sublime when I stepped out to watch Jay smoke would be enough to get me to take him by the hand and tug him to see what’s around the next bend. Maybe not the *first* time, but eventually.Report
Re the post marriage comments…
That sir, is what I miss the most about not being married anymore.Report
…Probably Lóthlorien.
I am such a geek.Report
Well, mine was basically Rivendell without the elf-gothic architecture. A treehouse in Lothlorien would be suitable, too.Report
I basically live in Mordor.
//but now you’ve done it. What fictional place would I like to live in? That’s a tough one.Report
San Francisco, with all the homeless, addicted, and crazy people healthy, safe, and happy. All the sane but vicious people would still be there, too, but they probably wouldn’t notice anything different.Report
I want a bowling alley – with all the new gear and glitz.. with wide screen TV’s that will always show the Patriots and the Red Sox 😀Report
East Ironbound Island, Nova Scotia. Slightly foggy; cool but not cold. Either very early or very late so it’s not dark but not bright. The fog horn calls out and then a few seconds later the echo like a phantom twin foghorn answers from across the water. The fish aren’t gone and all my lost elderly relatives are back in their little homes up and down the rocky verdant slopes; oh and my cat and dog are there too.Report
I suppose life could get better. Kid could make World Cup and drag me around world class alpine resorts. Still, Whistler isn’t a kick in the ass. We have great skiing, mountain biking and climbing. Last year we were hooked on this video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A3PDXmYoF5U The first time my partner saw Kid watching this she warned, “just because you have the camera doesn’t mean you get the life. Kid retorted, “I have the life, just need the camera”.
On the process side of things, I get choked up over these:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1I__Kf7Ebrs
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FLeFfJ1XuEkReport
@russell-saunders
Though part of the real joy of After Life is watching them film the memories in wonderfully low-budget ways. It is partially a movie about the joys of filmmaking.Report