Monday, July 03, 2006

The Tana Waterfront

The office where I'm working in Tana is part of a mini-mall, seductively called The Waterfront. From a positional perspective the name fits, but that’s about it. In water-body taxonomy, the water to which the mall fronts is closer to a swamp than anything else. Real estate developers must have thought this name was preferable to Mall de Moustique, which would have been more descriptive and truthful. In previous times the swamp was bigger, covering more area than it does today. Some of the land was initially drained during construction of the mall, and more was done later to create space to build one of Tana’s gated-communities. Upon entering the community you pass through a wrought-iron gate staffed with 24-hour security, then drive along a tree-lined avenue with speed bumps every 100 meters, and take in views of the “waterfront” before you reach the mall. At times you could think this was somewhere in the US.

Working in a mall setting has its pros and cons. There’s definitely a convenience factor, especially when it comes to food. No food court, but there is a bakery with yummy French patisserie treats; an up-market cafĂ© serves fast and tasty plates of Middle Eastern food; and if you wanted to pick up some groceries for home, no problem—there’s a Shoprite, a South African grocery chain, on the first floor. And, if I were significantly wealthier than I am now, I could do more than window-shop at some of the other stores that populate the mall. A men’s clothing shop sells top fashion house labels, and even though this is the developing world, the prices aren’t. Aside from not being able to fulfill my capitalistic urges, there are other downs like more traffic and—the purpose of my post—having to put up with bad neighbors.

Let me explain. The CARE office is on the second floor directly above the Shoprite. And when I get to work at 7:30 there’s still another 2 hours before the grocery opens to the public. I settle in at my desk, collect my thoughts, and then start a musical odyssey provided free of charge courtesy of Shoprite. While Shoprite employees are preparing to open they enjoy using the central P.A. system play music. And, fitting of a store specializing in choices, the range of music that drifts into my office is impressive. It’s also a bit repetitive because a few days into my contract I detected a pattern to the music, a more-or-less fixed progression through different genres. Early morning hymns get things off to a soul-stirring start. I can’t understand the lyrics since they’re in Malagasy, but sometimes I catch a “Jesosy” or two. The second movement is a bit of Malagasy Classic Rock. Musically, this stuff sounds like Boston, Journey, and every other big guitar band from the ‘70s. Again, I can’t understand what they’re saying, but whatever it is, they’re feeling it. After a good hour of straight Malagasy, things move into US hair-band territory, with Bon Jovi and Guns & Roses taking top honors in the playlist. This pretty much rounds out and wraps up the morning show before Shoprite opens its doors and the music gets turned down to more neighborly levels. But, every so often the concert includes something truly special. One morning last week, for example, a Disney animated movie soundtrack medley played for about an hour. Beauty & The Beast, Little Mermaid, The Jungle Book, and much more: the hits just kept coming. Needless to say, the hours between 7:30 to 9:30 aren’t my most productive.

I think if this was the only thing going on in the morning I might be able to block it out, but in addition to the music there’s another distraction. My “office” is actually a room where the public computers to access the internet are located, so there’s usually a pretty constant stream of traffic of folks coming in and checking email, news, Hello Kitty fan-club sites, etc. Most interlopers are quick and polite, recognizing that someone (me) is trying to work. But there’s a young French woman doing a summer internship that has me one step from madness. Her routine is to show up around 8 and check email until 9, and she’s a public talker. While she checks her messages, she talks to the computer, or maybe she’s talking to whoever wrote the email, or maybe it’s to ghosts, leprechauns or yodas. I know she’s not talking to me, because the first day we met I heard her saying something and I responded, thinking she had addressed her comment to me. There was an awkward moment between us as I realized she hadn’t spoken to me: the only other sentient being the room. I tried to shrug it off thinking she’s young, perky, and has a cute French accent when talking to and laughing with the monitor, but it’s too distracting. Partly it’s weird, but I think an equal part is me feeling jealous she’s having so much fun talking with her email messages.

1 comment:

The Locke said...

Dan, I hate to laugh at your uncomfortable predicament, but your public work area is so ridiculously non-conducive for productive work that one either has to laugh or cry when reading your post. I think the only other setting that would possibly be even more distracting would be a public restroom which would not only have the aural distractions, but several olfactory issues that you would have to deal with as well.

Just out of curiosity, do you have some kind of portable CD or MP3 player you could use with headphones to try to block out the distractions? I got a pair of cheap noise-canceling headphones when I got a cube neighbor late last year with a penchant for hocking loogies and then blowing them out his nose....did you even know that was possible? I didn't either, but trust me, after hearing it 3-4 times per day for 2 months; you begin to wish it wasn't.