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See? Invisible! |
A Guest Post by Grant Tolley
Tourist.
The word evokes many images – almost all of
them negative – in the mind of anyone who is not one. Yet, it cannot cease to amaze one, that we
can despise the tourist in others,
while adopting so many of those . . . er . . . interesting characteristics when on vacation ourselves.
My wife and I recently toured the
islands of Greece. I am an
anthropologist by training, so invariably we spend a lot of time
people-watching, as well as enjoying the sights and scenery. While overall it was a truly memorable and
delightful trip, we inevitably encountered a variety of tourists, exhibiting a
variety of ‘touristy’ characteristics, all of which we tried desperately to
avoid, even though we were, technically, in the ranks.
I swear that what follows is an accurate
representation of our observations of fellow tourists.
The Loud Tourist
This category of tourist has a number of
sub-groups.
The first is The FogHorn Tourist.
This is the traveller who doesn’t seem to
mind announcing, at 100+ decibels, intimate details of their life to the entire
world.
“But Henry, I’m sure I packed your
hemorrhoid salve! That’s just awful, to get hemorrhoids. And on your birthday too!”
I’ve heard a lot of sad tales, but I’ve
never heard of hemorrhoids appearing on someone’s birthday. I always thought
they appeared somewhere else.
And another FogHorn, who told the following tale of woe :
“I was so
sick! First I was throwing up. My supper
and everything! And then I had diarrhea all night! Oh, I tell you, Mildred, it
was just awful! I didn’t know which end was which!”
No comment.
I only hope that at half time, she switched ends.
Second in the Loud Tourist category is The
Anglocentric Tourist. This is the one who believes that any
foreigner can understand English if it is spoken slowly, and loudly enough.
“Toi-let pa-per. Toilet paper.
You know [insert largely obscene but mostly incomprehensible hand
gestures here], TOILET paper. In the BATHroom. TOI-LLL-LET! TOI-LET-PA-PER! IT’S ALL OUT! IN
THE TOI-LET!! [more incomprehensible hand gestures]”
One can only smirk when, at the end of this
performance, the hotel clerk says, with a straight face and in Oxford English:
“We’ll look after it right away, madam.”
The third sub-group in the Loud Tourist category is The Airhead Student Tourist. This category consists of students fresh out
of a college semester, who apparently are touring exotic lands for the first
time. They can be both Loud and Ugly, and for all their education, are seemingly under the
impression that because they are in a non-English-speaking country, they are
the only ones on the bus who actually speak English.
The following particular pair stood eight
feet apart during a 45-minute bus ride, sharing their intimacies with – they thought
– no one, again at 100+ decibels.
“They didn’t check my ticket. How do they know I paid?”
“Well, like, when I first came, I thought
the same thing, so once I didn’t buy a ticket, and the ticket inspector came
and asked me, and I, like, totally freaked, and they hauled me down to the
police station, and I was, like, totally hysterical, and then you know
what? Like, then I got my period, and it
was just awful, a big mess, and I started crying, and they still fined me 65
Euros, and then they let me go, but on the way home, I was attacked . . . ”
After 20 minutes or so of this, the
conversation turned to :
“I am so
jealous of you, you’ve had so many loves in your life! Like Jeff.
Was he, like, a major love, or just a mini-love?”
“Well, he was kind of a mini-love, but
turned into a major love, and I was, like, so totally in love with him, but he dumped me, and I was sad, but I
got over it quickly . . .”
When this pair got off the bus, someone behind us breathed out an exasperated “Thank goodness that’s
over!” We were not alone.
The High-Tech
Tourist
This is the tourist who carries:
·
a regular camera
·
a digital camera
·
a video camera (sometimes two)
·
a cell phone
·
an electronic chronometer watch
·
a digital light meter
·
a GPS indicator
·
a Palm Pilot
·
a Walkman
·
several other indistinguishable
gizmos
This particular breed of tourist becomes
totally dysfunctional when something – anything
– beeps. I took perverse
delight in sidling up close behind High-Tech
tourists and making the alarm on his watch beep. I have to admit that the unfortunate victim
looked like a human windmill as he tried to figure out which toy was making the
noise.
The Bleary-Eyed Bar
Tourist
Truly amazing to us were the people who
spent thousands to travel half-way around the world, only to spend thousands
more getting plastered, day after day, in the hotel bar. There were a few on this most recent trip.
“Why, shore, when I [hiccup] was in
Australia, they got good wine there, you know [urp], the bar at the Hilton had
‘em all, it was great . . . [hiccup] . . . an' I even got to see one of them
weird kangaroo thingys . . . "
The Map-Impaired
Tourist
These hapless souls are the ones standing
on a corner peering at the street signs, while wrestling with an
indecipherable, gigantic map that is desperately trying to be a kite instead of
a map.
The same ones you will see, two hours
later, on another corner a block away, with the same map.
In the same wind.
And the same helpless, confused look on
their faces.
“Harriet, I know we’ve been here
before. I remember this bakery.”
“Are you sure, Harry? I don’t remember a bakery. I don’t recognise anything!”
Harry then squints at the street sign.
Harry then turns the map upside down.
And peers at the street sign again.
And at the bakery again.
“Just give me a minute. I’ll figure this out. What street is our hotel on again??”
The Know-it-All
Tourist
“Look, honey, your favorite perfume. L’Air
du Temps. Look at the price! It’s really cheap here.”
And suddenly a helpful, friendly third
voice joins the conversation. It is the Know-it-All tourist standing next to you
who jumps in to show off his or her supposed knowledge about the country you
are visiting.
Or anything else.
“Oh, yes! It’s because Greece is part of
the European Union now, and they can get things from other countries in Europe
really cheap. That’s a marvellous French
perfume. L’Air du Temps. That means Birds in Flight, you know. I’ve been to France three times now . . . . .
”
The Obnoxious
Tourist
“Take this back! This is . . . this is disgusting.”
The Obnoxious
Tourist is rejecting his meal in a four-star restaurant.
As loudly as he can. For the whole restaurant to hear.
“But sir,” objects the server in her
faltering English, “eet is zackly what you order.”
“I didn’t order no #@&% rabbit-food
crap like this!”
“Sir? Did you not order the horiatiki?”
“No, @#$%&*. I ordered the @#$&% Greek salad!”
“But sir, that is what horiatiki means. Greek
salad.”
“Well, %$#*& it, why didn’t you tell me
there were $%#$ black olives in it! I
hate olives! They don’t make Greek salad
like this back home. Why don’t you
@#$%& foreigners learn how to make it right!”
The Insensitive
Tourist
There are several sub-species in this
category as well.
First is the Intellectually Insensitive Tourist, (as in just plain stupid).
“Sir? Sir! Sir, please don’t touch . . .
Sir, please don’t climb on the statue!
Sir! Sir!? . . . . Security!!”
Next is the Socially Insensitive Tourist.
“Sir, this is a no-smoking area . . . .No,
sir, that rule applies to everyone, not just to Greeks.”
And, there is always the Culturally Insensitive Tourist.
“Excuse me, sir, like the sign says,
photography is not allowed in the Church . . . . well, sir, because it is a
sacred place, sir . . . . well, maybe not to you, but it is to the local
people, and out of respect . . . . How would you feel . . . . Oh, I see, well .
. . er . . . Churches are places where millions of people go to worship . . . .
“
The
Invisible Tourist
Alas, I must confess, we fall into this
category.
We try hard to blend in.
Not to be Loud.
Or Insensitive.
Or Obnoxious.
Or Anglocentric.
We try desperately to learn a few phrases
of the local language, and practise them rigorously.
We eat the local food.
And pretend hard that we omnivores really
enjoy boiled octopus and eggplant mush.
We take the bus. And the subway. We refuse to be seen emerging from a taxi.
We are invisible.
At least, we would like to believe no one
can tell that we are that most abominable of creatures, tourists.
But still, people know.
Somehow, they know.
They speak to us first in English.
How could they tell?
Maybe it’s the lobster-red, sunburned
noses.
Maybe it’s the broad-brimmed sun hats we
wear, out of mercy for our noses.
The ones in which no self-respecting Greek
would be caught dead.
I think I get it now.
Maybe it’s the small Canadian flag.
Embroidered on our shirts.
And the flag pins on our hats.
And the ten pound camera hung unobtrusively
around our necks.
And the brilliant whiteness of winter legs
sticking out of really scary Bermuda shorts . . .
Maybe we're not so invisible after all . .
. .