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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2007-04-25 | | To be born once again, in a totally different language and culture, is a painfully travail, sometimes going to the dangerously vicinity of the pathology. Thatās because the second time you are completely aware of travail and to feel it in all your mind & soulās joints is a task completely incumbent on you. This kind of birth has an exhausting particularity : it might take a whole life to be done or, at least, much too much and this time nobody gives you applause for your babbling, for your āon all foursā toddler way of walking among (new) people, (new) things and words. Nobody freezes when the thermometer shows that your temperature goes crazy and nobody has long āwhite nightsā next to your bed when you dream deliriously about āthe lost paradise.ā Nobody lifts you up when you fall nor wipes off your tears and send away your fears. Nobody hands you a āmagna cum laudeā crown when you learn / write your first poetry ā a good sign though that the birth into a new language goes actually well (good dilatation, a close to normal pulse, a good Apgar, figurative speaking, of course). Thatās why the birth into a new language and culture looks more like a disease, whose cure can be found generally back home, to the place youāve just been leaving it because of N, X, Y, Z reasons. The syllables painfully coagulate themselves and it looks like you learn before anything else how to say āouch! It hurts!ā Maybe thatās why creating a poem or just writing an ordinary text (here) has not too many chances to wave the pink coloured flag of optimism. At least not those from the beginning. All your senses pay tribute to this travail Iāve been mentioning it. And thatās why on the first stage, you can barely see something from the new promises of the new life, you can barely hear (or not hear it at all) the song of a totally new and different way of living, still being seduced by the sirenās song of the Past, of your rootsā¦ Because so far Iām concerned this travail is getting dangerously long, I decided to go for a Caesarean even this means one point less for my Apgar. And here I am, trying to coagulate out of syllables my ānice to meet you!ā salute into a new world & language. HOW TO LEARN A FOREIGN LANGUAGE Hello there! Anybody in here? Iāve been told Iām just another Unexpected baby And Iām probably Too loud for your confortable ears Or I might Get you nervous For not knowing How to smile In your language yet The only thing We already have In common Is crying No matters what The reason is So, please, Let my tears Say hello to you Until Iāll learn How to smile Again All I need you To do Is You giving me your hand Some great researchers Use to tell There is this new method of learning A foreign language and A different way of living -by touching hands which carefully contain into their crystal-clear image An open soul
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