On The Wasting of my Time
(The delicious fruits from the Cashew Nut tree in the Djenné Djenno garden have nothing to do with what follows)...
Two annoying incidents recently have made me remember something that happened
a long time ago when the department store Barkers on Kensington High Street still
existed. It was like this :
I popped in briefly to Barkers to buy something. I was
approached by a highly groomed, smooth
talking shop employee who wanted to know if I would like to acquire a Barkers
store card. I said no. The salesman- it was a man if I remember correctly- was
not so easily put off. ‘But it will only take two minutes!’ he assured me. I
objected that it wasn’t a question of lack of time, I simply didn’t want a
store card. Even this failed to dampen his enthusiasm. ‘Just come with me,
Madam’, he continued undeterred, leading me lightly by my elbow to a small
office where he told me to sit down on a sofa while the formalities were taken
care of. I don’t know where Barkers trained their staff or who trained them, but the
technique was spectacularly successful. I found myself sitting on this sofa,
although I quietly wondered to myself what I was doing there, especially since
the minutes were ticking away. The store employee popped his head around the
corner : ‘Only a moment to wait now !’ he beamed encouragingly when he
saw me fidgeting and about to leave. Finally
he turned up and announced gravely :
‘Sorry Madam, your application has been refused !’
When this blog was nominated one of the the 25 best blogs of
the world last year by Time Magazine I was approached by two American agents
who wanted me to turn it into a book. It is not the first time this suggestion
has been made to me. I have always replied that I am not ready and that I am in
the middle of a story that is not finished. This is what I said once again. I
am too busy to live my life in Mali to be able to stand back and write about
it. However, I was persuaded to give it a try and I felt it might be churlish
and ungrateful not to attempt it. So I
wrote a couple of chapters and spent quite some time on this, without much
conviction however. My attempt was rejected by the agent that had been
soliciting me . Apparently my effort lacked narrative drive. It may well
be true and I am the first to acnowledge that I am not ready to write about my
Mali life yet, but nevertheless rather annoying …
And a couple of days ago I received an email from an
Austrian firm called EZA World Shops who said they dealt with Fair Trade. They had heard of MaliMali
and they wondered if we might be interested in selling our products to them. I
wrote back and said yes, we would be interested. Then they sent me voluminous PDF files about their operation
and what Fair Trade implied. Would I please read through the requirements, they
asked. ‘Sure’ I agreed obediently. Three hours later I had plowed through it
all and sent off an email to tell them so. ‘Now would you please send us some
broschures or some pictures to show us your products, came the disconcerting
reply. Surely they had seen the MaliMali website, which is why they had
contacted me ?? I then sent them the link to the site and they replied that
they would pass it on to their buying department. This department then wrote me
an email to say that they thought the products were lovely but they did not
think their company would have the market for them, so therefore no thanks !!
2 Comments:
A great comment on modern life Sophie. Love the photo.
"I am not ready and that I am in the middle of a story that is not finished." Wow... this phrase is so siscint, yet captures why one has trouble getting the experience out... not ready, and not over yet.... so who knows the ending yet??????
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