Starchamberfall
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- May 20, 2010
- Messages
- 134
- Reaction score
- 6
Today an American was by on business, and for a stay. He makes me realise again why I love the U.S.A.
He is what I would call a "best American"; a real one : he has a lot of class and a lot of pizzazz. He is quiet and strong. It is not rare to meet such a one.
(Travelling internationally the last decade, it struck me over and over: it is as thought the U.S. has a secret policy of sending out tourists unlike this guy: people who show poorly overseas, confirming every stereotype of Americans conceivable, though they are actually atypical Americans...!)
I grew up in Canada in a town near the end of the world. The first seasons of Sesame Street, and the first Sesame Street books, mediated to me a whole other way of life on this continent I would not otherwise have encountered: the inner city (real and Sesame-ised versions) ; a way of sharing life deeply and intensely, a way of living one's dreams. Thanks, Sesame Street, U.S.A.
He is what I would call a "best American"; a real one : he has a lot of class and a lot of pizzazz. He is quiet and strong. It is not rare to meet such a one.
(Travelling internationally the last decade, it struck me over and over: it is as thought the U.S. has a secret policy of sending out tourists unlike this guy: people who show poorly overseas, confirming every stereotype of Americans conceivable, though they are actually atypical Americans...!)
I grew up in Canada in a town near the end of the world. The first seasons of Sesame Street, and the first Sesame Street books, mediated to me a whole other way of life on this continent I would not otherwise have encountered: the inner city (real and Sesame-ised versions) ; a way of sharing life deeply and intensely, a way of living one's dreams. Thanks, Sesame Street, U.S.A.