The first level of Purgatory was somewhat akin to being trapped in 
Das Boot.  The sound of metal creaking in the bowels of a submarine.  Metal gates echoing for what seems like eternity.  Steel everywhere, no color, no sunlight to speak of, and a bed made out of rough blankets which would fit right in the barracks on either side in World War II.
I thought of the joyous scene when they are drinking and feasting and break into "It's a long long way to Tipperary and Tipperary is our home . . . "
So, let's all travel back through my timeline to when I was a very, very young 20 year old living in Dublin, Ireland.
  | 
| ASDA Bus Station, Bournemouth, England, Age 20 | 
It was the darkest and most depressing winter of my life.  I worked off Grafton Street with lots of young people from places other than Ireland.  We had to dress in turn of the last century (1900) servant uniforms.
  | 
| I had a pleasant conversation one morning with a man who used to tour with T. Rex about songs about Deborahs. | 
  | 
| The Bedroom I Let, Summer St. North, Dublin | 
I lived in Summerhill in North Dublin adjacent to the Council Estates.  I would walk to work in the dark down O'Connell Street with a solo garda on the beat.
At work, there wasn't a window letting in the misty grey daylight, and by the time my shift was done, there was absolutely no light.  To get to the women's locker room, I would go through a door from the bakeshop near the entrance and go 
down stairs then upstairs like I was inside a German Expressionist movie.
I once cleared Thom Yorke's breakfast plate and watched him read and drink his tea in my empty section.  All of the Irish girls acted like I was special, but we all know I was just a freak.  
I would go sit in Saint Stephen's Green somedays to enjoy the only green I could really find in the dreary city center.  One day, I was sitting on a rock reading a newspaper, and I was approached by a cute, Irish guy.  He asked me if I wanted some drugs.  I laughed and wasn't sure he was serious.  I mean as a child of the '80s, Nancy Reagan had prepared me for this precise moment:  "I'm just saying 'No' to drugs.  That means, 'No, thank you.'"  
  | 
| Broken Window Pane | 
The children in Summerhill didn't know how to play.  They would just fight and make each other scream.  One day, they threw a rock through my bedroom window.  I had to sleep in all of the clothes I owned that night; the landlord couldn't fix the window until the next day.  The Frenchmen with Polish last names who I lived with convinced me to report the crime to the Garda station because I spoke the best English.
Now, let's go ahead and take a commuter flight to beautiful Scotland.  I hadn't seen sunshine all winter, but when the plane approached Edinboro golden sun glistened through the clouds.
  | 
| Edinburgh Castle, Scotland | 
I called my friend from a telephone booth right in the shadow of the castle (too expensive for me to tour).  And, what do you know a character right out of 
Trainspotting starts yelling at me to get off of the phone.  So, holding the phone in my hand, I turn to face him and I yell and scream back at him:  I'm paying to use the telephone and he can wait his turn or go run around the corner to another payphone.  He's Scottish; he should know where the hell to find another phone in his own country.
  | 
| Squirrel, Princes Street Gardens, Edinburgh | 
  | 
| Edingburgh in the mid 1990s |