So many times in London you hurry by grand residences with large silent doors - Georgian windows cloaked by secrecy and heavy curtains, and in the velvet dark outside you wonder what life is like for people who live in such places. On Friday night we knew the secret handshake; the ‘open sesame’ to unlock the door. In London speak; this translates to knowing a friend of a friend of a friend.
We were ushered inside to an echoing stairwell where the ghost of 1920s piano music trembled in the air. High ceilings stretched for eternity; stone flag steps were lit with hesitant candles. The mask of elegance slipped and faltered in the flickering shadows – gone were the days of decadent luxury for this building. What was left was a Grimmauld Place – the shabby heart concealed inside a grand facade. We drank champagne, pondered mysteries, and danced a tango as candelabras burnt low. When the hour struck three we scurried out; well-wrapped mice streaming from a once-proud ship. In the few minutes it took to cross the road and duck into a taxi the house had already turned to stone. The party continued behind its doors undetected and invisible; in London the party always continues somewhere.
It was a bit of an odd night, but fun and unexpected. Cities steeped in history and intrigue are made for such nights, I think.
By contrast, Sunday was spent enclosed in a women-only retreat hidden behind the bustle of Covent Garden. You enter via a shop, shed your clothes, don a robe, and wander around determined to relax. One therapy room was across a bridge over a koi carp pond and up some stairs, and there was a slight Logan’s Run feel as we ascended. I checked my hand for a red flashing life-clock, but all was well.
We relaxed, swam, gossiped, and let our worries dissipate like the steam that rose from the spa pool. Time sped up, slowed down, extended, decreased. We were in a little time warp, and if Doctor Who had stepped from behind a pillar and said we were in fact part of the woman-only world of Zog then I wouldn’t have been at all surprised.
Sometimes you live in the city; sometimes it lives in you. But either way, and even better, moments like this create stories!
Sign me up! Sounds great.
ReplyDeleteWhat on god's green earth were you up to this weekend!?!? WOW!! What a brilliantly decadent and other-worldly weekend!!!! Me I was tucked away somewhere in Oxford Street trying to dodge packs of tourists!!! Wow!!!!!
ReplyDeleteI always wanted to be Farrah Fawcett in Logan's Run!
Take care
x
How I envy your weekend - I was hoovering, cleaning and cooking and trying to help the kids with their homework. Same as every weekend in fact. Wanna swap?
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you had a relaxing Sunday.
ReplyDeleteSounds delightful, I haven't done a adult retreat for years.I took kids on a few but my part wasn't as relaxing always.Where i live the old homes are apartments now. The big ones are in the country, down a lane so they aren't seen very well.my last retreat we brainstormed all night on building our lives, we barely slept.
ReplyDeleteI want to go there too!
ReplyDeleteSounds like you had a great weekend. I would so love to go to a place like that.
ReplyDeleteThis post is awesome! I love it!!
ReplyDeleteAnd now my outrageous plans to get the train to London and possibly go shopping in Oxford St and find some great deals on Paperblanks notebooks (please please please) seems a lot less exciting.
ReplyDelete- Sophia.
Haven't been in London since 1992, and you just made me want to go back...NOW.
ReplyDeleteyou have a beautiful way with words and the image you paint here is lovely.
ReplyDelete*Smiles* I love it when you take me to these decadent mysterious places. Never been to London, but alas seeing it through your eyes is an elixir in words. (Hugs)Indigo
ReplyDeleteTo quote Tina Fey, as Liz Lemon, "I want to go to there."
ReplyDeleteYour words rested on my tongue like butter. Yum.
In the States there are some places that were once speakeasies and have that feel to it. Love it when those places find you.
Delicious descriptions! I once lived in EC1 near Farringdon Road - super creepy, much like Grimauld Place. Great post.
ReplyDeleteI love the incongruity of all that...
ReplyDeleteIt sounds like you had a great time. :)
ReplyDeleteAnd beautifully written stories they are... "well-wrapped mice streaming from a once-proud ship"... now THAT is why I read your blog! Or one of the reasons... A x
ReplyDeleteThat was so good and so well written. Sounds like heaven!
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderful weekend you have had. I loved your descriptive depiction of it. I could nearly imagine myself there.
ReplyDeleteSounds very interesting, where were you, we need details :-)
ReplyDeleteThe next time I get sick, I'm coming to see you! Logan's Run, The Doctor, swimming, mysterious buildings....and you depicted them so vividly.
ReplyDeleteI don't know which I envy more, your weekend, or your writing of it, bravo!
Ohhhh what fun...you got to experience what's behind the facade. What stories you now have!
ReplyDeleteLos Angeles being a newer place by comparison to a city like London doesn't have the same type of grandeur. Still I pass by the houses in my own newer neighborhood and wonder what is behind those doors. Most of my neighbors are an enigma to me.
ReplyDeleteGlad you signed up for the Blogging from A to Z Challenge.
Lee
Tossing It Out and the Blogging From A to Z April Challenge 2011
umm...I'll have what she's having.
ReplyDelete--especially the massage. :)
Sounds good to me, I think I've been there! I could do with a bit of indulgence right about now. :-)
ReplyDeleteLondon percolates with stories.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing yours!!
I'll be in London soon, and cannot wait!
You had a quite a weekend! I love the images you created with such descriptive details. I want a weekend like this!
ReplyDelete