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Pool-side anxieties, the Rambam and one golden, salted margarita

Reflections from the Queen Mary 2: people-watching at sea and a tribute to the Schindler of Spain

April 30, 2025 16:11
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SOUTHAMPTON, ENGLAND - DECEMBER 26: The world's biggest passenger liner, the Queen Mary 2 arrives at her home port of Southampton December 26, 2003 in Southampton, England. Britain's Queen Elizabeth II will officially name the 550m GBP luxury liner on January 8, 2004. (Photo by Scott Barbour/Getty Images)
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I write to you this week from a ninth-deck stateroom on the Queen Mary 2 after my second appearance in the week before an audience of a thousand assorted people in the ship’s Royal Court Theatre, situated on decks two and three, standing room only… followed by a buffet lunch in the Britannia pick-and-mix restaurant on deck seven and a blustery walk three times around the deck to get our steps above the current meagre 2,370.

“What would you do if I blew overboard?” I shouted at David, my travelling companion and background screen images provider. “I’d wave,” he retorted.

I have to stop myself from being an Eeyore all the time, visualising disasters in my mind with great clarity, while he is blindly optimistic. Later after a game of table tennis, lying on a deck listening to kids playing in the pool, my mind went like this, in 30 seconds: “Aw, I’d love to bring the grandkids here for my big birthday, they’re old enough to be up here in the pool on their own. What if one of them went in the deep end? The other one would come to my cabin and say, ‘Sacha’s in the medical centre…’”

This is what comes of having a mother who regarded Valium as a substitute for chocolate and a dad who said, “Go pamelakh” (go slowly) every time I went upstairs.