I had left myself half an hour to get there, as I usually did, and as usual I arrived outside the gate ten minutes before anyone else, time which I utilised by trying to invent new ways of tying my kefia scarf in order to retain some the heat that was trying to flee the boarders of my overcoat and escape into the darkness.
People started to turn up. First a young boy, about nine years old, whose silhouette could have easily been mistaken for a small snowman. A gloved hand was thrust at me and the usual greetings were exchanged. I spoke with him a little about the weather, exploring the limits of my vocabulary (and quickly finding them) as more and more people gradually turned up, calling out jovially 'Mr Jems' as they too stretched out their hands to greet me, which they then either raised to their lips to kiss or placed over their chest in a gesture that would have looked very strange had the guidebook not told me that it was a sign of respect.
After 45 minutes of waiting someone decided to call the teacher. Apparently he wasn't coming because his sister was ill. So I was off the hook… for the time being.
When Monday came round I concluded, once again, that I definitely needed to go to judo. Don't get me wrong, it's not that I don't enjoy it - after all, without it I would be doing pretty much no
heart-pumping exercise at all, Damascus not being one of those cities with a small army of joggers patrolling the streets - but the distance, the strange environment and the language barrier all contributed to my slight reluctance to get stuck back in.
Straight after class I grabbed a taxi and headed towards the club. I chatted merrily with the taxi driver, but I feigned misunderstanding when he started asking if I have a wife and then produced a series of synonyms and actions to accompany the question of how many times I sleep with her a week, occasionally breaking his mime act to glance at the road ahead. When we stopped, he demanded 100SP (1GBP) which I refused to give him, so I got out of the car, chucked a 50SP note onto the seat behind me, and ran down the road, looking over my shoulder
every 10 paces to make sure he hadn't chased after me for more money.
As I walked along the street up to the club at about 19h15, grabbing a coke from a small shop on the way to try and boost my energy levels, I could see ahead that there was already a small congregation forming outside the gate, confirming that I didn't really need to get there
with quite so much time to spare as I had been doing. By 19h35, after the usual meeting and greeting, it looked like the coach wasn't going to show, filling me with a mix of disappointment after having got myself worked up mentally ready, and elation at having postponed the inevitable yet again. But I had though too soon.
The coach, a 'generously' built man probably in his forties, pulled up next to us on his bicycle and everyone followed as he unpadlocked the metal gates and headed over to the dojo. We quickly filed in, desperate to get out of the freezing cold, but we were greeted by the chill and gloom of a power cut.
In England, winter Judo was only different to summer Judo for the first five minutes of each session. We would enter the dojo, turn on the heaters, hop around a bit whilst complaining about the cold, do a proper warm up and then think nothing more of it. Syrian winter Judo is quite different.
Now, not only do you have to concern yourself with the guy you are fighting against, but the room is littered with precariously positioned candles, making any activity on the mat almost impossible to see. In addition there is the muscle petrification that creeps through your body if you stand still for more than 15 seconds. Oh, and cold feet.
Only when after we had started the vigorous hour and a half warm up did I realise that the reason there were so few people on the mat was not because they were taking a long time to change, but because the coach had let them go home as it was too cold. I knew that this was
going to be an 'experience' which I would just have to endure in the hope that a better person would come out at the other end… hopefully one without pneumonia.
By the end of the warm up I couldn't work out what all the fuss had been about. The candles were atmospheric, casting shadow-puppet shapes onto the walls; I was warm and sweating from the exertion; and my feet weren't that numb. But as soon I stopped moving to wait my turn to do randori, the cold enveloped me and pervaded my very being.
After changing out of my gi at the end of the session the coach came up to me and suggested I get a taxi home instead of my usual walk back. 'No,no, I'll be fine!' I assured him as I headed back out onto the street. I couldn't feel my toes.
I made it as far as the corner across from the club and decided to hail a taxi.



