What a State!
A Brit's personal view of Texas
by Jan Andersen
In December 1995, I embarked on my first ever trip to the USA, visiting my
English friend Clive, who had recently moved to Houston to work for an
American engineering company.
The US and its culture had always fascinated me, but no amount of advance
reading or watching episodes of American soaps could have prepared me for
some of their strange and mystical customs and rituals.
Neither was I equipped for my torturous outward-bound flight on Continental
'Saunalines', as I called them. This was akin to being strapped into a
sardine tin for ten hours at a non-regulatory temperature of 100 °C, having
food and drink thrown at you at infrequent intervals by ancient stewardesses
and being forced to view the in-flight air disaster movie. The alternative
to the movie was having to speak to the obese kid sitting next to you,
chewing gum with his mouth open.
Is Continental the only airline that has a minimum entry age of 90 for their
stewardesses? Maybe this would explain their apparent lack of co-ordination
when serving passengers. After playing football in the aisle with my bread
roll, a stewardess whose face needed ironing handed me back this fur covered
object, obviously my roll, which had collected an interesting assortment of
dirt whilst on its journey towards the 1 foot circumference toilet.
The flight number was CO5, which I changed to CO2 after sitting behind a
flatulent gentleman for half a day.
My first shopping trip reinforced my belief about the reserved nature of the
British.
"How ya'all doing?" chirped a Houston shop assistant, invading my personal
space by questioning me from a distance of one inch. I quickly checked over
my shoulder assuming she must be addressing a large group of people. I soon
realised that groups of people in larger numbers than nought, are referred to
as "ya'all". Judging by the barrage-balloon proportions of some of the
inhabitants though, I could see how easy it would be to mistake some of them
for more than one person crammed into the same outsized outfit. You know, the
sort of person who enters a shopping mall whilst their backside is still
halfway across the car park.
After the eleventh assistant in the same shop had asked me how all of me was
doing and whether she could show all of me anything, I felt ready to snap,
"Look, why don't you just push off and let me shop in peace - if I need any
help I'll ask for it!"
"Have a nice day!" shrieked another assistant even more falsely, with the
standard coat hanger grin and six rows of teeth, when in reality she probably
cared not if I had a horrendous day and walked out of the store straight into
the path of a ten-ton truck. Do all Americans talk 50 decibels louder than
any other nationality, or is it just the Texans? Maybe they're all hard of
hearing, which would explain their apparent inability to hear you when you
say, "No I don't need any help thank you, I'm just looking."
In one children's clothes' shop, after informing the assistant that we were
"just looking thank you" (i.e. "stop breathing down our necks because you've
got halitosis and please leave us alone"), she proceeded to drag down six
hundred mix 'n' match outfits, demonstrating how one T-shirt could team up
with twenty other items in the range as though we were totally clueless on
colour co-ordination. She just happened to be sporting lime green leggings
and a fluorescent pink and yellow jumper, with contrasting purple shoes to
complete the ensemble. With Clive snorting with suppressed laughter and I
attempting not to burst a blood vessel in my face, we made a hasty escape
when the assistant's attention was diverted, leaving the entire beautifully
matched contents of the shop in a psychedelic pile on the floor.
Having been offered the opportunity of an unfurnished room in a friend's
house, Clive decided that he ought to shop for a bed. After seeing an advert
for a sale at a place called 'Star Furniture', we decided to venture on down
and search for a simple, cheapish double bed. Once through the doors of this
'shop', which looked more like the entrance to the Ritz, we were pounced upon
by a bouffant-haired lady called Kimberley, who informed us that she was our
assistant for the day. ('For the day?' I cringed. We were only planning on
being here ten minutes). I was totally mesmerized by the amount of make-up
she was wearing and wondered which brand of garden trowel she used.
"I'm looking for a bed", announced Clive in a "I'm only looking tentatively
and don't want to be hassled or to have to listen to your moronic sales
patter thank you very much" tone of voice. To admit that you are actually
looking for a particular item, is fatal. Cue the bulletin, at 1,000 words
per minute and without pausing for breath, on the attributes of every item of
furniture in the store. "We have classical, contemporary, conventional,
unconventional, antique, Tudor, post-Tudor, pre-Tudor, Elizabethan,
post-Elizabethan, pre-Elizabethan - what colour did you say the wood was in
your bedroom? - Victorian, four-poster, two-poster, no-poster - what style
did you say your house was? - Pre-war, post-war, Crimean war - Each style
has a complete range of matching furniture - did you want the entire bedroom
suite or was it just a bed?" ("Just a mattress will do, thank you").
"This
particular suite is just so quaint and you two look like quaint people,
chortle, chortle. By the way, where ya'all from? I just love the English
accent! We have French, Scandinavian, English - to make you feel at home.
Ha! Ha! Snort! Country style, town style, in-between style (any bloody
style you want)..." 'We were thinking more post-Walmart style actually" I
thought.
Every American we met had a distant relative or friend residing in some
remote corner of the UK and they expected us to know them personally.
Kimberley then added the inevitable, "You know I have some friends in
England. You might know them - the Browns - Susan and John? (Funnily enough,
yes, we're intimately acquainted with all six million of them). I haven't
seen them all for, must be going on ten years, about fifteen now." (Who
cares?) "Well, anyway, we met them in Florida about fifteen years ago and we
exchanged addresses but we haven't seen them since." (or heard from them, I
imagine). "I say 'we' but it was actually my late husband who spoke to them
first and he became friendly with John, but Susan didn't say very much."
(Probably couldn't get a word in edgeways). Late husband eh? Wonder how he
died - suicide I imagine.
"I'll just let ya'all wander on around and I'll come and check up on you
later", meaning I want to make sure that you, a) don't escape before I've
clinched a sale or, b) that you're not testing out our most exclusive suite
in a horizontal position.
This 'caring' American attitude certainly doesn't extend to the highway.
Anyone who's ever attempted to drive in the States will know that
consideration doesn't play any part in the average motorist's road manner.
Once behind a steering wheel, the Texan roadhog becomes very territorial.
"This is my stretch of road and I sure as hell ain't lettin' no-one in."
Clive and I were very kindly offered the loan of his boss's car for the
duration of my visit, a smart executive-like Honda saloon. After attempting
to enter a busy lane of traffic from a slip road, I had visions of returning
this car in a more compacted shape and saying something like, "I've
re-designed your car - it looks like a biscuit tin now". In optional 'give
way' situations like the above, the Texans suddenly become blind, or you
become invisible.
Even in compulsory give way situations, like at traffic
lights for example, some motorists have the same interpretation of red, green
and amber lights. They all mean, "Go". "Stop" signs mean, "Go before the
bastard at the other junction does". Roundabouts don't exist. Instead, the
city highways are scattered with traffic lights at regular, thirty second
intervals and their equivalent of motorways are 'tollways' for which you have
to pay a fee for the privilege of using. These are great fun and require you
to throw the correct change into a fishing net suspended on the side of a
booth. It's like being at a fairground and equally as frustrating if you
miss.
The national speed limit has been increased to 65 mph on the Interstate
highways and 55mph on all other roads, unless otherwise stated. Given that
most of the roads are wide and straight, this may give one the impression
that you are safer motoring in the States. Not so. Any local driver
cruising at above 10mph is a danger to the public. Having a steering wheel
must confuse them, especially when there aren't many corners on the average
highway. They know it must be there for a purpose and so feel that they have
to use it - all the time. Like a child pretending to drive, they wiggle the
steering wheel to and fro at great speed whilst sporting a psychopathic grin,
thereby turning the roads into fairground bumper car circuits.
Another distracting influence are the giant Billboards which line the
highways and advertise highly personal things like Vasectomy and Impotence
clinics. I'm certain that many accidents must have been caused by people
trying to scribble down the relevant telephone numbers for the practice
specialising in their particular complaint.
We witnessed a few minor pile-ups, which had me craning my head out of the
window, like you do, eyes on stalks. However, when I brandished my camera to
photograph one of these incidents, Clive warned me that I was likely to be
shot for doing so. Which brings us onto the subject of the availability of
guns.
Whilst shopping in an all-purpose store called Walmart and playing hide and
seek with the assistants, we came across the toy section, which was
positioned directly next to the counter selling a wide range of guns. What
does this tell children? That's right, if the assistant keeps hassling you
to buy some hideous toy, you nip across to the gun counter and shoot her.
Houston, Texas is a Voyeur's and an Exhibitionist's dream. Maybe it's the
inherent desire to be noticed, but if you've ever visited a public toilet in
this city you'll know exactly what I'm talking about. The design of them is
what I can only describe as saloon-style, with a two-foot gap underneath and
two-inch gap either side of the doors. This allows everyone the privilege of
watching you relieve your body of unwanted matter and viewing any other basic
act that people perform in the 'privacy' of toilets.
Clive pointed out that only a pervert would walk along the line of cubicles
peering lustfully through the gaps, yet it was almost impossible not to
notice the rows of feet as you searched for a vacant toilet. It's that
can't-help-but-look syndrome where some irresistible force is drawing your
eyes toward something that you desperately want to avoid staring at. I used
to have a Biology teacher with three severed fingers on his right hand. The
more I tried to avoid gazing at them, the more I found my eyes superglued to
the missing appendages and my mouth uncontrollably spurting out things like,
"Can I give you a hand Sir?"
Clive's reassurance was wiped out in an instance, the moment a colleague
relayed his personal 'toilet' story to me. Whilst staying with friends in
the States and after having suffered a heavy dose of constipation for two
weeks, he decided it was time to get things a movin'. Yee hah! Not wishing
to subject his houseguests to something that could ultimately be very nasty,
culminating in a visit from the Environmental Health Officer, he decided to
take himself off to a public toilet.
It was when he was in full straining
mode, that he became conscious of a pair of staring eyes attached to an
eight-year old face, lodged firmly in the gap between the hinges and the
door. His curt reaction to this naturally inquisitive child, which
immediately terminated the peep show viewing, was a simple, "Beat it, you
ill-mannered little git. I'm trying to have a difficult shit."
Another example of American exhibitionism is the abundance of Oprah-type chat
shows where (supposedly average) people discuss personal, soap opera-like
situations. The shows are hosted by people with names like Tempest, Carnie,
Jerry, Geraldo, Ricki Lake, Frozen Lake, Dried-up Lake and so on. Some of
the shows I saw covered subjects like, 'I got my mistress pregnant and now
she and my wife want to share the experience', ('beat each other up' in
English) and 'I was born with both male and female sex organs' ('I'm a freak'
in English). Although I hate to admit it, these shows were almost compulsive
viewing and I was totally mesmerised just by the lingo.
At school, American children learn Math instead of Maths. Mathematics is
plural, so does this mean that in their Math lessons, they learn only one
sum? (E.g. 'How many Mexican immigrants are there in Houston?' Answer: 'Too
many'.) If they have Domestic Science lessons in the States, they'd only
need two lessons to cover the creative possibilities with beef, chicken and
bread rolls, i.e. Steak garnished with a cellar of salt, beefburger in
dandruff-covered bun with wafer-thin slice of soggy, warm gerkin,
Mayonnaise-soaked Chicken McSandwich or chicken nuggets.
There are two different types of eating place in Houston: 'Fast food' joints
and 'Forever' joints. The first covers joints like MacDonalds, Burger King,
Tex-Mex (Mexican) takeaways and Kentucky Fried Chicken's. The second
includes places like Steakhouses and the few and far between 'foreign'
restaurants. In one steakhouse we were given the privilege of clutching a
mini vibrator, which was supposed to buzz and quiver to inform us that our
table was ready.
This we were not told until two hours (and a couple of
bottles of wine) later when we witnessed other guests, who had arrived only
10 minutes earlier, being seated at their tables. Our vibrator was sitting
comfortably on the bar and it was only when Clive inquired why we had been
waiting so long, that we realised we were actually supposed to clutch this
object in order to sense the vibrations. By this time, we were both
completely pissed and I vaguely recall asking if I could take mine home with
me in order to amuse myself during lonely periods.
This trip was an amazing insight into a culture that I never imagined would
be so different from that to which I was accustomed. After just eleven days
in this odd land of over-dramatic personalities with teeth like the Osmond
brothers, I could imagine how some tourists would be ready to buy a gun and
shoot themselves.
copyright Jan Andersen 1999
You can email Jan Andersen ay JanAndersen928@aol.com