Iceland review - 2019, Side 107

Iceland review - 2019, Side 107
105 Iceland Review during the off-season), he would later be described by the Danish painter Carl Bloch as “physically the most perfect man” he had ever seen. Decades ahead of his time, Müller warned his contemporar- ies against a sedentary lifestyle: against smoking, drinking, and indigestible food (writing that nature avenges herself “with mathematical certainty”). Müller’s prescience may explain why his legacy lives on in West Reykjavík (although the Commander has never read his book). It’s a daily spectacle that always begins the same way, with a rallying cry that all of the patrons of West Reykjavík’s pool are now long familiar with: “The exercises are beginning!” Meant to be taken as an amiable invitation (everyone is allowed to par- ticipate), but bellowed, as it is, in the Commander’s deep, resonant voice, with backing vocals from his adjutant, Ragna (68), it sounds more like a directive. This rallying cry sends the Commander’s troop – Skuggi (71), Hrönn (73) Björn (68), and Margrét (75), among others – scuttling, half-naked, from the hot tubs and pools to the far corner of the facilities, where they line up, in loose formation, in front of their leader. They’re not the most vigorous of units, but what they lack in youth, mobility, and grace they more than make up for in spirit; there is singing, there is laughter, there is semi-impromptu poetry (a few members take turns composing topical quatrains, which they then sing). The exercises include “the Helsinki” (invented by the Commander), where the Müllerist swings both hands upward and then downward, as if wielding a pair of ski poles; “the Archer” (a classic from the Müller canon), where the practitioner pretends to fire a bow, while the Commander cautions, “don’t shoot the priest!” (a reference to rev. Ólafur Jóhannesson, who distributes coffee in plastic cups to the Müllerists at the conclusion of their exercises); along with several trunk-twisting calisthenics that are executed with various degrees of gracefulness. It all began as an accident, with an accident. In 1982, perched upon scaffolding ten feet above the ground, the Commander felt the platform beneath his feet collapse, sending him plummeting, knee-first, into a flat rock (he had worked in con- struction for most of his life). During rehabilitation,
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