San Francisco is a nice town. And a window into America.
It felt a little strange to be in a place that I had never been, and yet was so familiar. Thinking about it, San Francisco is a character in a lot of movies and TV shows that I've seen. Driving through the city was like driving through TiVo, or the 7-day-hire section of the DVD rental store. The Dirty Harry movies. Mrs Doubtfire. Nine Months. The Wedding Planner. This list goes on and on. So there was a real sense of being here before. I'm picking that other folks have a similiar experience in other iconic US cities, like New York, or Washington, or Boston. Cities that are so much a part of the our popular culture that they have become so familiar, and in a way that either adds to or or detracts from the experience of the place. I'm not decided yet which.
I had dinner last night with a colleague, his wife, and some of the folks from the office in London. It felt quite cosmopolitan, and in all honesty, way out of my comfort zone. I felt like I was on the set of a TV show, eating with these folks in a cute little cafe on Lombard. The whole experience, whilst very pleasant, was alos quite existential. I'm a home-body; my comfort zone exists when the Girls are around me. Engaging with the my dinner companions was a real struggle, not because of who they were, but more because of who I am.
Needless to say, with four comany folks around the table, the dinner talk was all about work. And as much as we tried, all conversation turned back to work. It's so easy. It's what consumes us. It's our default position, a position that is multiplied exponentially when egged on by the company present. And thinking about it now, there doesn't really need to be too much egging on. Find me someone who remotely understands what I do, and I'll blab and blurt and slutter and splew on (yes, new word! Say it with distain for best effect.) all night and day about my job. With little regard to my audience, at times. Love, I'm sorry I'm such a boar (or bore) sometimes.
My hosts were remarkably hospitable. They're an English couple, about the same age as me, with a lovely apartment in the Union Street area and a view over the bay. The apartment had a contemporary feel to it, but the basic artitecture was deco; high vaulted ceiling with curved mouldings, polished floors, and an open feel. Very nice. I could see me and Girls living there, all it's missing is a yard.
After dinner, we went back to apartment and carried on the discussion on how we'd all, between the five of us, solve the woes of the Company. I was graciously given the use of the futon for the night. The futon was hard. My sleep was light. And at about 7.30am on a Saturday, someone makes happy with a nail gun. All day I've craved sleep.
But, to ward off the sleep, I've had a guided tour of a nice town. My host, after his wife on their other house guest had been dropped off at a restuarant for a lunch date, took me down to Chrissy Field, through the tourist tackiness of the piers. We walked along the foreshore, talking about stuff and stuff, and he, in a low key way, explained SF to me. Why the Golden Gate Bridge is red, not gold. (It's was the bridge to the gate of the city founded on the gold rush). Why the fog rolls in almost daily. What it's like in SF, compared to London. That there are more bums in SF than anywhere else in the States. (The weather, and the fact that a major veterans hosptial was here in SF).
The Golde Gate Bridge is really spectacular, in an inexplicable kind of way. Maybe it's a different thing to everyone. On a base level it is an attraction, an icon that is to SF as the Opera House is to Sydney or the Eiffel Tower is to Paris.
But to me, and I love things like this, it's sweeping and almost romantic. It solidly connects the city with Sausalito peninsular, standing firm as a junction. In the interest of not scolding myself with lyrical waxing, suffice to say it made an impression on me.

My host, incredibly generous with his time, took me from Chrissy Park up through The Presidio and over to Ocen Beach, where all the rich folk live in multi-million homes over looking the Pacific. Apparently Robin Williams has a home over there. Not sure if he was home.
Then back up past Gold Gate Park, where a huge music festival is happening this weekend, and down into the city. I got dropped off at Powell, and caught BART back to Pleasanton. I taxi'ed back to the hotel, and immediately filled the time with Task.
I went to Target (my host and his wife up-grade Target's profile by using it's French pronounciation, Tar-chay...), and did some shopping. I moped around Borders, looking at stuff that the Girls would all love. I could almost hear them saying "Daddy....".
Then back to the room. TV on. A biscuit and a drink. Shuffle some work around. Channel surf.
I enjoyed being in the city. It was, more than anything, a welcome distraction.