What happened to the Rishi Sunak I knew at school?
The fun one was a cruise of the Caribbean with 3,000 Americans who were on the Atkins diet. We were weighed in on embarkation and there was a cash prize for the person who lost the most weight by the voyage end. In spite of the ten to 15 meals a day, I lost three quarters of a pound, and the eventual winner shed six. One man died minutes after we’d cast off and was kept in the fridge until we returned to Florida. By rights he ought to have been weighed at the end too, some said, as he was surely in with a chance of winning the prize.
American Atkins dieters are the most cheerful people on earth. Every night was party night and I punched far above my weight in the pulling stakes. For the Ancient Egyptian dinner I sat opposite a bodybuilder and his wife. The first thing the bodybuilder told me was that he ate 30 eggs every god damned day. When he saw me admiring his wife’s breasts, he said, ‘I bought those. Six grand. Ain’t they great?’ ‘You like them?’ said his wife, throwing back her shoulders and bringing them to bear. ‘Would you like to feel them?’ I looked at the bodybuilder. ‘Sure. Go ahead,’ he said. ‘Better than real!’ So I reached my hand across the dinner table and gave the right one a tentative squeeze. ‘Go right ahead. They won’t bite!’ she said.
One morning I was doing the early ‘Walking with Bob’ activity class around the observation deck — more of a very slow dawdle to allow people to keep up — when the verdant hills of Jamaica hove into view. After the usual gargantuan bacon and eggs feast for breakfast we disembarked. At the bottom of the gangplank was a desk, and behind the desk stood a passport-control officer wearing a peaked cap, white shirt and gold braided epaulettes. Lounging next to him was what I took to be an inquisitive bum. While the official searched for an empty page on which to issue his entry stamp, the bum gave me a big hello and wondered whether I was looking to buy some of the finest ganga in the Caribbean. The transaction was swiftly completed and I received goods and stamped passport at the same instant.
There was no opportunity to test the veracity of his advertising pitch on the whistle-stop minibus tour. The first time I was able to try it was at the top of a pyramid in the ruined Maya city of Chichen Itza, Mexico, a few days later. The weed totally wrecked me psychologically, the guide had to talk me back down gently, and I was slightly disengaged from realities for several days afterwards.
Cruising, in my admittedly limited experience, can be miserable or it can be fun. But with the great Taki now aboard for the forthcoming Spectator cruise from Venice to Athens, it’s sure to be the latter. I can’t wait.
To find out more about the Spectator cruise, click here.
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