The man didn’t look like someone I’d regularly trust, but, when a guest of his friend, there was nothing I could but watch and marvel at his wonder. Falling over himself in his weak English abilities, he still didn’t cease his crocodile smile the entire night nor did he bother to move himself from his seat for the five hours I endured my own exhaustion through the mayhem. Because he didn’t move himself, I certainly wasn’t going to do so either; the opportunity to see a biological miracle such as this must surely be so incredibly rare that I’d never chance across something quite like this again in all likelihood. However, despite the miracle that was taking place before me, all I could think was, “Would you please stop smoking so much pot so I can go to sleep?”
This is where I found myself last Thursday evening. It’s been an interesting week, ladies and gentlemen.
I’ll get back to this story in a minute; let me clear up the context of it all. All this week, I’ve been on my summer vacation from class, so I, with 8 friends, rented a van and made a tour of Switzerland. We began by driving to Liechtenstein, then to St. Gallen, Basel, Zurich, and Strasbourg, France. This area is absolutely gorgeous; we were surrounded by the Alps during the majority of the trip, and we also saw most of the coast of the Bodensee, which is the sea that is bordered Germany, Switzerland, and Austria. In Konstanz, Germany, we stopped to see the cathedral from whose tower one is able to see all three countries. Quite a sight, to say the least.
In the first three cities, we stayed in hostels, which are fairly cheap, but still quite taxing when one wants to make a long trip for as little as possible. To solve this problem in the final two cities, my friend Olek from Poland made arrangements for us with Couch Surfing hosts. For those of you who have never heard of Couch Surfing, it’s an international network of people who offer to host travelers in exchange for being later hosted by other Couch Surfing members. It’s a pay-it-forward sort of system. I know, sounds sketchy, looks sketchy, seems sketchy. And if it’s got wings and quacks, it’s probably a duck, right? Ab-so-goddamn-lutely. But what’s life when completely comfortable, eh? Well, it doesn’t yield much to write about. So here I find myself sitting on a couch in Strasbourg, desperately wanting to sleep while my host throws a party around me and my group. Four hours prior to this, we walked into his apartment, which wasn’t exactly on 5th Avenue or anything, but we’re not in Harlem, either. The place was fairly run down (the toilet had to be manually flushed, the shower curtain was held up by a string, there were no two pieces of matching furniture in the house, etc), but the two occupants seemed incredibly nice and easy to talk to, so I had no complaints. I figured we’d have a beer or two with them and then we’d wind down around midnight or so. “Not at all,” interrupted the Fates, in a jovial chorus. The beers went from number one or two for everyone into 6 or 7 for Olek and our hosts while we just sat waiting for the party to end. While we waited, our hosts proceed to call up a few friends and turn up their stereo. Now, I’m usually up for a party, but at this point, I’d not gotten more than 6 hours sleep in any one of the last 6 nights, I was getting a cold, and I had probably walked about 400 miles in the last week (due to my group’s steadfast refusal to buy subway tickets). I was exhausted. I sat on the couch and listened to the conversation between Olek and our hosts, occasionally turning to my comrades to make a face or complain (I know, I was being a total negative nancy, but so was everyone else, so whatever). Eventually, the friends show up and join in, and suddenly a party has broken out. One of the friends, (I believe his name was Antoine or Jacques or something incredibly French) sat down on the other side of the coffee table from me. He introduced himself, but we didn’t much speak as he quickly set to work with his own vices before turning his attention to his French compatriots. This one is the biological miracle I was referring to in the first paragraph; let’s call him Jacques. Throughout the duration of this party, I witnessed Jacques smoke more marijuana than I’ve ever seen anyone smoke in one sitting in my life. He also had a peculiar method, which I’ve since learned is fairly common for Europeans. He sat down and pulled out a pack of Marlboro reds, a pack of rolling papers, and a big bag of pot. He would take out a cigarette, tear it open, and dump the tobacco in his hand. He’d then throw away about half of the tobacco, replacing it with pot before rolling the new mixture up in one of the rolling papers. He smoked the entire pack’s worth of cigarettes (mixed with marijuana, of course) in about two hours. The group finally went out clubbing, and, of course, Jacques was in tow. We woke in the morning to discover that neither our hosts nor any of their friends had returned after the clubs closed. We simply took our things and left. I feel like these people will succeed somehow in life, perhaps in entrepreneurship. They certainly have the cahoneys…that, and a friend who can do a lot of drugs.
However weird this might have been, I really had no business expecting normality, given what had happened the night before. In fact, the behavior of the Strasbourg guys is really quite normal in my view; I was just really tired at the time, and I figured that most people wouldn’t really want to throw a party for strangers that they’d be hosting. Our host in Zurich was not anything I could have ever expected. I’d heard of people like this, but I wasn’t entirely sure they weren’t just urban legends. Raphael proved everything true.
We got into Zurich from Basel around 11 o’clock in the morning and we began our tour of the city. We walked around the city until about 8 o’clock, just seeing the sights and doing what regular 20-25 year old kids do. Olek was the contact person for Raphael, our host, who said that he would not be home until between 9 and 10, being that he had to drive home from Belgium that day. Finally, the time came and we drove to his place. He led us into his apartment and showed us the places he had set up for us in his living room. Despite the fact that he had gone to a lot of trouble to set up mattress with sheets and all for us, all any of us could marvel at were the numerous religious icons that covered the walls and all open surfaces in the room. I could smell the acrid scent of incense upon walking into the place, but that seemed fairly normal until I saw the unusual decor. Then, it just seemed typical. Furthermore, the icons were not limited to one religion; Jesus stared at me as often as did Buddha, and there was a Shinto shrine sitting on the desk in the corner of the room. Gandhi adorned the wall opposite a painting of Shiva. None of this, however, really compared to the contents of the main bookshelf in the room. It was a rather large wall unit, completely filled with books. As I started to browse the collection at the top, I saw the things I expected to see, judging by the rest of his place. There were many volumes on alternative medicine, how-to’s on bringing up your children in the “pure” fashion, political advocacy books for organic living, etc. I was browsing from top to bottom, and, as I worked my way to the bottom, the hippie how-to books slowly but surely changed from “How to Live Purely” to “How to Save Your Marriage.” There may have been an “Not Committing Suicide for Dummies” in there somewhere, I can’t exactly remember, but they were all self help books at the bottom. This wasn’t the end of the odd experience, but I was (sadly) somewhat glad to see that this dude’s “alternative” lifestyle wasn’t what I’d been missing out on as the secret to happiness. Not that I’m not happy, but Rafael seemed to have an eerily content disposition for having 9 strangers arriving at his home at 11 pm.
Despite the lateness of the hour, none of us had yet eaten dinner, and it is customary to use the kitchen of your host in the couch surfing program, which is what we had planned on doing. After getting settled in, we asked Rafael to use his kitchen, a request he was more than happy to approve; however, he next asked what we planned to cook. The entire day, knowing that we would be arriving late and needing rise early, we had decided to do spaghetti with meat sauce, being that it’s so easy and quick. Rafael, however, was not so keen on the decision, telling us he had not had meat in his house in 10 years, much less cooked any. He told us he needed to think about this and asked if we would mind waiting for him to meditate the issue. Rafael disappeared into his room for thirty minutes before emerging with his decision, which was the following: We could cook the meat in his house, so long as we kept the door to the kitchen closed while it was cooking and we would buy the pan from him, being that he would be unable to use it again for himself after the flesh of an animal had been cooked in it. Being that there was 9 of us and he didn’t charge us much for the pan, we agreed and cooked our meal. However, the strange experience was still not over.
After dinner, Rafael began to share with us details of his occupation. Despite his closeness to the Earth and rather hermetic lifestyle, it seems Rafael, at least between the hours of 9 and 5, is a computer programmer. Furthermore, he begins to tell us that his company is close to completing work on a brand new artificial intelligence technology that no one else has. It also seems the system they are developing uses 90% less power than anything anyone else has at this moment and will soon revolutionize the computer industry; he also no less hints that it would be “a good time” to invest in his company if we “wanted to make some real money.” A man who rejects the modernity of the world for a simple, organic lifestyle evidently also wants to be on the cutting edge of new technology and to give out stock tips to strangers; irony’s got one hell of a sense of humor, right? He continued to talk to us for the next hour and a half until we told him that we really had to get up early to leave, and he finally let us go to sleep. The morning went fairly easily, just due to the fact that we had to leave so quickly so that we’d have time to see Strasbourg and all, so there wasn’t too much notable from the morning, other than the fact that he made sure none of us left his house without his business card. I sleep well knowing people like Rafael are out there, takin’ her easy for all us sinners, yet still leading a somewhat productive life with one eye on the future. It doesn’t make a lot of sense, but I like to think he refuses to leave anything to chance. It’s hard to be certain which religion is truly correct, so ole Rafael buys into all of them. And, in the case that there is no God and no Afterlife, well, Rafael’s not quitting his day job. A little money, food on the table (but no meat, of course), and the prospect of an Afterlife, yet still with the problems of the everyday man, Rafael seems to have an eerily sane view of life through his own eccentricities. I like this. Rafa, you’re ok by me. Just stay away from my kids, aight?
Wednesday, June 17, 2009
Saturday, April 25, 2009
John Fights Communism
Finally, a new post; this sometimes can be work for me, but it’s such a catharsis for me to do it. Being that many of my thoughts, at least the witty/funny thoughts, about the things I experience don’t translate well (if I were to translate them, they’d probably just sound like a dude saying everything that comes to his head, and no one likes that guy, right?), this is really my best forum to get all the John out of me (so I can fill up again in the next few days). I guess everyone can suffer from multiple personality syndrome; each language a person speaks is a different personality, I would think. At any rate, I’ll get to gettin’ and go, eh?
In the time since I’ve last written, I’ve, as earlier stated, been on a bit of an adventure through Vienna, Bratislava, and Budapest, which was, as you can imagine, quite an experience. Just to get the official stuff out of the way, I’m going to describe each place in three words, and then I can get to the best parts of the trip: the shallow and often callous observations. Vienna: Mozart, high-brow (that is ONE word), and Hapsberg-emperors-who-have-awesome-mutton-chops-that-often-connect-to-even-cooler-mustaches-whom-I-am-considering-emulating (that, too). Bratislava (the capital of Slovakia; big surprise what’s about to follow, I’m sure): Soviet-destroyed, rusting, and cheap. Budapest: (I’ll just use one phrase) best kept secret in Europe. I found Budapest to be like Europe’s Boston; beautiful weather in spring, very diverse community, not as “hustle-and-bustle” as New York, yet still retaining its big city atmosphere. Very cool location. To get more details, just look at the pictures on my facebook; they’re pretty heavily labeled with all the good deets.
Anyway, on to my two favorite stories from the trip:
Budapest is the location of the first McDonalds east of the Berlin Wall (its doors opened sometime in the 50s, I think), and it is located on Budapest’s Vaci Utca, a street which was formerly the main shopping location of the locals and an important sightseeing locale for tourist, but is now almost totally geared toward tourists, and, therefore, fairly lame. Anyway, the McDonalds is fairly significant, not so much in that it’s a McDonalds, but more for the fact that it was symbolic of the capitalist West and that capitalism was winning the Cold War. When the Soviets were still in power, people used to line up around the corner to get a taste of Western forbidden fruit. Anyway, so my first day in Budapest, I’m stumbling around the city, trying to get my bearings and check things out, and I REALLY have to go to the bathroom. Now, dear reader, what you also must understand is that in Europe, free public toilets are incredibly difficult to find, and it’s not always just so simple as to walk into any place of business and use the toilet. There are public restrooms around, but you have to pay for them, and I will NOT pay to use the bathroom, and bathrooms in restaurants are generally reserved for customers (which makes me wonder what we’re really paying for in these restaurants, you know?). And I needed one that is decently clean, because…you know…I was going to need to, y’know…sit down. So I’m walking around, desperately seeking out a bathroom, and I stumble upon this McDonalds. The place looks fairly well maintained and it’s pretty clean in the restaurant area, so I feel pretty confident about the facilities as well. Plus, it’s pretty crowded and busy, so the staff really has bigger problems than to watch who is coming and going from the bathroom, so I’m safe on that end as well. But, also because of the crowd that was in the place, there’s a line for the bathroom. So I wait, and while I’m waiting the line grows bigger behind me. By the time I went in, there was about 5 or 6 people waiting behind me. When I go in, I figure out why there’s a line for the bathroom at a McDonalds: there’s only one toilet in the bathroom. Now, it’s important to note the layout of the bathroom at this McDonalds (and the weird layout of a lot of European bathrooms); it’s arranged as such that the sink and toilet are in separate rooms, with the door to the restaurant leading into the sink room and another door leading to the toilet. I’m not just saying that the toilet is inside a stall; there’s a wall with a door in it between the sink and the toilet. Anyway, so it’s about to be my turn to use the toilet and I’m standing in the sink room waiting. I go inside and do my thing, but when I’m finished, the toilet begins to flush down, but it quickly stops and the bowl just fills with water. Yes, I travel approximately 5500 miles and what do I do? I clog the toilet at a location of important anti-Communist symbolism. Anyway, as I turn to walk out of the bathroom, I come to the horrifying realization that there’s at least 5 or 6 people waiting behind me to use the toilet…and that I have to look these people in the face as I go. But, of course, the embarrassment I felt really couldn’t compare to the monstrosity that awaited him inside that small room and the empathy I was simultaneously feeling for him and his grave situation. And suffice it to say, I didn’t stick around to see the results of my actions; I was gone like a horse out of the gate. At any rate, I now feel like I’ve now done my part to fight Communism, and that’s what’s really important here.
Next story is considerably shorter. When I first arrived in Budapest, I was trying to take the subway to get to my hostel. Being that I don’t speak Hungarian (and that English is more closely related to Hindi than it is Hungarian, which is no joke at all), getting to where I wanted to go was a bit tricky. I stood there studying the map and quickly realized that I didn’t know where I was, so I had no idea which direction in which to travel or what line to take. For some reason, the bus company whose bus I had taken to Hungary didn’t drop us off at the bus station; we just stopped at this park next to a subway stop. As I walked into the subway station, I had not looked at the sign outside to see where I was and, rather inexplicably, there were no signs inside the station that I could see that told me where I was, unlike every other subway station in the world. To solve this problem, I figured someone must speak English in the station, so I begin asking passers-by. The first two to walk by me did not speak any, but then a younger guy walked by, who was wearing a suit and carrying a briefcase, so he seemed like he would be fairly well educated (I love the standards by which I judge such a thing), so I caught his eye and said slowly and carefully, “Do you speak English?” He turned and gave me a strange look, replying, “What country do you think this is?” I gave it my best effort to stifle laughter and didn’t bother to inform him that I was pretty sure I was in Hungary; I was more taken aback by the senselessness of the comment than anything, but he was pretty helpful after that with giving me directions and such. Stiff-ass Europeans, right? As funny as I find this, it’s also overly typical, if indeed I understand what he meant by the question. It’s kinda cryptic, but whatever, I’m going to judge if I want to.
Naturally, other events of note happened in Vienna and Bratislava, but I’m getting fairly tired of typing. I’ll end with this: To all those who may be traveling through Europe in the near future, don’t forget about eastern Europe, particularly Budapest. Bratislava I could have done without, but Budapest was awesome and Vienna, of course, has a lot to offer, particularly with cheap transportation to most eastern Europe locations (it’s known as the “Gateway to the East”). And don’t be afraid to buy a travel book; my mom sent me one, and I thought it was going to be an incredibly lame thing to use, but it was REALLY helpful and gave me good info on what’s actually worth seeing, local traditions, what to watch out for, etc. I highly recommend anything by Rick Steves. Until later, dear readers; John, signing off.
In the time since I’ve last written, I’ve, as earlier stated, been on a bit of an adventure through Vienna, Bratislava, and Budapest, which was, as you can imagine, quite an experience. Just to get the official stuff out of the way, I’m going to describe each place in three words, and then I can get to the best parts of the trip: the shallow and often callous observations. Vienna: Mozart, high-brow (that is ONE word), and Hapsberg-emperors-who-have-awesome-mutton-chops-that-often-connect-to-even-cooler-mustaches-whom-I-am-considering-emulating (that, too). Bratislava (the capital of Slovakia; big surprise what’s about to follow, I’m sure): Soviet-destroyed, rusting, and cheap. Budapest: (I’ll just use one phrase) best kept secret in Europe. I found Budapest to be like Europe’s Boston; beautiful weather in spring, very diverse community, not as “hustle-and-bustle” as New York, yet still retaining its big city atmosphere. Very cool location. To get more details, just look at the pictures on my facebook; they’re pretty heavily labeled with all the good deets.
Anyway, on to my two favorite stories from the trip:
Budapest is the location of the first McDonalds east of the Berlin Wall (its doors opened sometime in the 50s, I think), and it is located on Budapest’s Vaci Utca, a street which was formerly the main shopping location of the locals and an important sightseeing locale for tourist, but is now almost totally geared toward tourists, and, therefore, fairly lame. Anyway, the McDonalds is fairly significant, not so much in that it’s a McDonalds, but more for the fact that it was symbolic of the capitalist West and that capitalism was winning the Cold War. When the Soviets were still in power, people used to line up around the corner to get a taste of Western forbidden fruit. Anyway, so my first day in Budapest, I’m stumbling around the city, trying to get my bearings and check things out, and I REALLY have to go to the bathroom. Now, dear reader, what you also must understand is that in Europe, free public toilets are incredibly difficult to find, and it’s not always just so simple as to walk into any place of business and use the toilet. There are public restrooms around, but you have to pay for them, and I will NOT pay to use the bathroom, and bathrooms in restaurants are generally reserved for customers (which makes me wonder what we’re really paying for in these restaurants, you know?). And I needed one that is decently clean, because…you know…I was going to need to, y’know…sit down. So I’m walking around, desperately seeking out a bathroom, and I stumble upon this McDonalds. The place looks fairly well maintained and it’s pretty clean in the restaurant area, so I feel pretty confident about the facilities as well. Plus, it’s pretty crowded and busy, so the staff really has bigger problems than to watch who is coming and going from the bathroom, so I’m safe on that end as well. But, also because of the crowd that was in the place, there’s a line for the bathroom. So I wait, and while I’m waiting the line grows bigger behind me. By the time I went in, there was about 5 or 6 people waiting behind me. When I go in, I figure out why there’s a line for the bathroom at a McDonalds: there’s only one toilet in the bathroom. Now, it’s important to note the layout of the bathroom at this McDonalds (and the weird layout of a lot of European bathrooms); it’s arranged as such that the sink and toilet are in separate rooms, with the door to the restaurant leading into the sink room and another door leading to the toilet. I’m not just saying that the toilet is inside a stall; there’s a wall with a door in it between the sink and the toilet. Anyway, so it’s about to be my turn to use the toilet and I’m standing in the sink room waiting. I go inside and do my thing, but when I’m finished, the toilet begins to flush down, but it quickly stops and the bowl just fills with water. Yes, I travel approximately 5500 miles and what do I do? I clog the toilet at a location of important anti-Communist symbolism. Anyway, as I turn to walk out of the bathroom, I come to the horrifying realization that there’s at least 5 or 6 people waiting behind me to use the toilet…and that I have to look these people in the face as I go. But, of course, the embarrassment I felt really couldn’t compare to the monstrosity that awaited him inside that small room and the empathy I was simultaneously feeling for him and his grave situation. And suffice it to say, I didn’t stick around to see the results of my actions; I was gone like a horse out of the gate. At any rate, I now feel like I’ve now done my part to fight Communism, and that’s what’s really important here.
Next story is considerably shorter. When I first arrived in Budapest, I was trying to take the subway to get to my hostel. Being that I don’t speak Hungarian (and that English is more closely related to Hindi than it is Hungarian, which is no joke at all), getting to where I wanted to go was a bit tricky. I stood there studying the map and quickly realized that I didn’t know where I was, so I had no idea which direction in which to travel or what line to take. For some reason, the bus company whose bus I had taken to Hungary didn’t drop us off at the bus station; we just stopped at this park next to a subway stop. As I walked into the subway station, I had not looked at the sign outside to see where I was and, rather inexplicably, there were no signs inside the station that I could see that told me where I was, unlike every other subway station in the world. To solve this problem, I figured someone must speak English in the station, so I begin asking passers-by. The first two to walk by me did not speak any, but then a younger guy walked by, who was wearing a suit and carrying a briefcase, so he seemed like he would be fairly well educated (I love the standards by which I judge such a thing), so I caught his eye and said slowly and carefully, “Do you speak English?” He turned and gave me a strange look, replying, “What country do you think this is?” I gave it my best effort to stifle laughter and didn’t bother to inform him that I was pretty sure I was in Hungary; I was more taken aback by the senselessness of the comment than anything, but he was pretty helpful after that with giving me directions and such. Stiff-ass Europeans, right? As funny as I find this, it’s also overly typical, if indeed I understand what he meant by the question. It’s kinda cryptic, but whatever, I’m going to judge if I want to.
Naturally, other events of note happened in Vienna and Bratislava, but I’m getting fairly tired of typing. I’ll end with this: To all those who may be traveling through Europe in the near future, don’t forget about eastern Europe, particularly Budapest. Bratislava I could have done without, but Budapest was awesome and Vienna, of course, has a lot to offer, particularly with cheap transportation to most eastern Europe locations (it’s known as the “Gateway to the East”). And don’t be afraid to buy a travel book; my mom sent me one, and I thought it was going to be an incredibly lame thing to use, but it was REALLY helpful and gave me good info on what’s actually worth seeing, local traditions, what to watch out for, etc. I highly recommend anything by Rick Steves. Until later, dear readers; John, signing off.
Thursday, April 9, 2009
John Gets All Artistic On You
I wrote these two on the bus between Vienna and Bratislava in an attempt to share with everyone everything that is involved in total immersion language training. Keep in mind that, although they concern the same topic, the narratives are completely unrelated, if there's much of a narrative at all. Aside from the strenuous and frustrating practical training with the language, there's also quite a bit of emotional baggage tied up in this process, and I'm just the sensitive kid to respond to it, I guess. In any event, I hope these say all I want them to:
Soon the quirky soldiers begin to come, charging, to attack your fortress. They are more in total than your available army, and they’re commanded by five-star generals, but they seem manageable from the security of the fort. They come first in few numbers, one here, two there, a small platoon over the trenches. Waddling awkwardly, they’re quickly put down, their questions swiftly answered. However, the battle picks up; they siege the ears, but, again, they are duly met with those prepared slings and arrows. The battle degrades from easy victory to stalemate as the sides trade blows. But, look, your munitions run scant! Listen, your men are muntinous! Feel, your pulse has quickened! Taste, your mouth is dry with speechlessness! When the head is at odds with itself, the body has no hope.
The attackers have breached the doors! How is this? They’re no better than your soldiers, eh? Do they employ the same methods? Do they think differently? How do they visualize the way? Are not their commands the same? How…do they?
To win this battle, your General rethinks. The semantics are the key, but he must begin with them rather than reaching them. That translation is everything, yet a person, the essence, the reality of him, is all in what is his original thought. A message is a person, and he is, of course, nothing without it.
The tactics change, and new defensive maneuvers are deployed. Your men are issued new rations, and the battlefield twinkles as the swords reflect the sun. The intruders are beat back; the homeland is defended. A personality changes, and all flows; a risk taken, and a goal achieved. But what thought is given to the accountants, who sit before abacuses far flung from the battlefield? The general, although happy with his latest outcome, withholds angst at the thought of watching the scales tip.
Slowly, cautiously are the steps taken across this bridge. A most precariously hung suspension bridge, the steps must be so here. What is a deed but its method? Can action and command be separate? Can command and language similarly proceed independently? What is existence if not preceded by thought? Obvious hardship is undergone in the fierce arena; sometimes steps forward are taken without gaining ground. Forward? Nay, ‘new’ would better suit.
The footfalls all make different sounds; sometimes like spoken words, sometimes like the scratching of a pen, sometimes they even seem to be silent but for a barely audible stretching and relaxing of muscles as eyes move across a page. Boots are weighed down by a wary fear; alertness is a false comfort. Sure, you’ve learned to walk, but can you hike? Run? Frolic? Prance? Trot? Shuffle? The realization that the river flows swiftly beneath quickly and vividly manifests. No matter, the feet are kept.
Dark clouds ominously arrive; the wind begins to blow. The bridge sways; questions are asked of of the fortitude are asked, which normally go unanswered. Can it endure? In what state will it emerge? Will this trip turn sour? Control turns to hope, in the shadow of which waits the dread beast, Frustration. The bridge rocks like a bucking bronco, and the hands grip to familiar cables. Movement forward is slow, sometimes unnoticeable, even to the traveler. Yet it painfully continues, and the only ways out are the other bank or over the side, back into the familiar stream to be dumped back in those familiar places.
Should the traveler sometime find the opposite bank, will he still be the same traveler? A change is required, sure, to find this strange and wonderful place, but will the eyes interpret its details the same? The reaction be as it would have been? “Strange” and “wonderful” on the other side might have entirely different meanings. At home was this traveler comfortable with himself; security was self-supplied. Master of his domain, he certainly was- still is as he clings to himself. There, in short, he liked himself. Will a similar fondness be found in his destination? Should he continue at the risk of exchange himself for someone else? It is already a difficult bridge to cross; could he do it again if necessary? The questions fly as he continues onward. The rapid flow resounds in his ears, the wind howls as his weight is whipped back and forth, yet he continues onward, hoping for the best. He’s already learned to walk, and he’s yet to forget how to crawl; the footprints are still evident. Forward he walks, hoping the pattern will not change.
Soon the quirky soldiers begin to come, charging, to attack your fortress. They are more in total than your available army, and they’re commanded by five-star generals, but they seem manageable from the security of the fort. They come first in few numbers, one here, two there, a small platoon over the trenches. Waddling awkwardly, they’re quickly put down, their questions swiftly answered. However, the battle picks up; they siege the ears, but, again, they are duly met with those prepared slings and arrows. The battle degrades from easy victory to stalemate as the sides trade blows. But, look, your munitions run scant! Listen, your men are muntinous! Feel, your pulse has quickened! Taste, your mouth is dry with speechlessness! When the head is at odds with itself, the body has no hope.
The attackers have breached the doors! How is this? They’re no better than your soldiers, eh? Do they employ the same methods? Do they think differently? How do they visualize the way? Are not their commands the same? How…do they?
To win this battle, your General rethinks. The semantics are the key, but he must begin with them rather than reaching them. That translation is everything, yet a person, the essence, the reality of him, is all in what is his original thought. A message is a person, and he is, of course, nothing without it.
The tactics change, and new defensive maneuvers are deployed. Your men are issued new rations, and the battlefield twinkles as the swords reflect the sun. The intruders are beat back; the homeland is defended. A personality changes, and all flows; a risk taken, and a goal achieved. But what thought is given to the accountants, who sit before abacuses far flung from the battlefield? The general, although happy with his latest outcome, withholds angst at the thought of watching the scales tip.
Slowly, cautiously are the steps taken across this bridge. A most precariously hung suspension bridge, the steps must be so here. What is a deed but its method? Can action and command be separate? Can command and language similarly proceed independently? What is existence if not preceded by thought? Obvious hardship is undergone in the fierce arena; sometimes steps forward are taken without gaining ground. Forward? Nay, ‘new’ would better suit.
The footfalls all make different sounds; sometimes like spoken words, sometimes like the scratching of a pen, sometimes they even seem to be silent but for a barely audible stretching and relaxing of muscles as eyes move across a page. Boots are weighed down by a wary fear; alertness is a false comfort. Sure, you’ve learned to walk, but can you hike? Run? Frolic? Prance? Trot? Shuffle? The realization that the river flows swiftly beneath quickly and vividly manifests. No matter, the feet are kept.
Dark clouds ominously arrive; the wind begins to blow. The bridge sways; questions are asked of of the fortitude are asked, which normally go unanswered. Can it endure? In what state will it emerge? Will this trip turn sour? Control turns to hope, in the shadow of which waits the dread beast, Frustration. The bridge rocks like a bucking bronco, and the hands grip to familiar cables. Movement forward is slow, sometimes unnoticeable, even to the traveler. Yet it painfully continues, and the only ways out are the other bank or over the side, back into the familiar stream to be dumped back in those familiar places.
Should the traveler sometime find the opposite bank, will he still be the same traveler? A change is required, sure, to find this strange and wonderful place, but will the eyes interpret its details the same? The reaction be as it would have been? “Strange” and “wonderful” on the other side might have entirely different meanings. At home was this traveler comfortable with himself; security was self-supplied. Master of his domain, he certainly was- still is as he clings to himself. There, in short, he liked himself. Will a similar fondness be found in his destination? Should he continue at the risk of exchange himself for someone else? It is already a difficult bridge to cross; could he do it again if necessary? The questions fly as he continues onward. The rapid flow resounds in his ears, the wind howls as his weight is whipped back and forth, yet he continues onward, hoping for the best. He’s already learned to walk, and he’s yet to forget how to crawl; the footprints are still evident. Forward he walks, hoping the pattern will not change.
Friday, April 3, 2009
The Turkish Sales Pitch and John's Other Weaknesses
It’s Friday night here, and I’m sitting on the train to Vienna with nothing to do at the moment. I finished my German course today, thank God, and I’ve got about two weeks before the summer semester begins. As such, I’m taking a trip (which started out as a weekend, turned into a week, and is now a 10 day adventure; my pants are getting wet as my parents’ credit card melts) with three friends to Vienna, Bratislava, and Budapest. More on that after the trip’s over; here’s the skinny on the last few days:
Yesterday, I was in my room about to take a shower as I had just gotten back from jogging (or yogging, the “j” might be soft, I’m not certain), when there’s a knock on the door. I open the door to see a short Turkish man standing there; he quickly tells me that he wants to sign me to a different power company.
Let me press the pause button on this story and clarify something before continuing: In Europe, or at least Germany (readers of my blog will know without a doubt that there’s nothing I hate worse than making low and petty generalizations about large groups of people, of course), everything is made as inconvenient as it can possibly be made. Therefore, although I live in a dorm, I have to seek out my power and internet service or else I will have none. This is going on a bit of a tangent, but it gets worse; although there’s only one university that I attend, there are as many different offices to pay as there are different fees that I owe, meaning that I have to go to all of these places to pay. No website, credit cards never accepted, pay the bill, or go home; this is the attitude of these people. Furthermore, not only is the payment expected on time and in person, each payment has its own set of paperwork that must be shown at the time of payment, or the payment cannot be accepted. And, no, the required set of papers is not the same for every different fee; to be prepared, I now carry my passport, insurance card (which is provided by an American company), proof of refusal of German insurance (a paper I was forced to sign the first day; I don’t understand why I can’t just tell each office that I didn’t/ don’t want German insurance), proof of German bank account (being both my bank card and the paper I signed to open the account), proof of student registration (which is more than just a card), and a host of other bureaucratic nonsense everywhere I go. Ugh- Europe’s a great place to visit, but I completely understand why those dudes got on the Mayflower.
Anyway, back to the previously interrupted story: Being less than fully adept at German, I hesitate with the correct way to politely refuse the eager salesman as he is standing at my door, and he’s in my room before I know it. He explains to me that his power company will sell me power at 9 cents less per hour than my current service, and they provide environmentally friendly power exclusively. Somehow, he already has the numbers on how much power I’ve used this month (I’m 90% sure he was making these up on the spot, but I gotta hand it to the guy, this is a pretty slick move), and he shows me just how much money I would have saved with his company. Whether or not my power usage numbers were accurate, the fact remains that I’ll save money with this guy. I was still skeptical, until he pulled out a powerpoint presentation (IN A DORM ROOM) and used a laser pointer (when it was on a computer screen; seriously, a finger would have sufficed) to go through it with me. I had to indulge him; when somebody’s a true, legitimate schtick, you’ve really got no choice. True schtick is a rarity, ladies and gentlemen. At the end of this, I agree; he’ll save me some money, and I couldn’t turn down a pitch like that. Just after signing though, (not that I regret my decision, this is just funny) he reassures me that I’ve made the right choice by saying, “Trust me, I’m a Turk; I’m not like all these other Germans, just out to screw you.” Yeah, broseph, the Turks are known from Tokyo to Trinidad as being a trustworthy people; being a nation known for terrorizing Eastern Europe with seemingly random fits of invasion, not to mention being the origin of phrases like “thievin’ A-Rab,” I do trust a Turkish stranger to fix me up with a good deal on power. On his way out, he asks me if I’m his friend (not a joke), to which I have to politely respond, “Sure, why not?” He makes sure to give me his cell phone number (his reason being completely non-business related; “call me if you ever want to go to a REAL party”) and asks me for my American cell number in return, in case he “ever makes the trip.” Ok, I have to confess something here: I didn’t give him my real cell phone number. If I’d known Ben Hatch’s off the top of my head, Hatch would be getting a call from the Turkish power salesman (I think his name’s Sazuel), but, alas, I did not. Sorry, Hatch. The number I did give him? Call me homely, but the first number that came to my head was my mother’s; in any event, she’s the sort of person that would hang up on a stranger asking for her son with an exotic accent. God bless that woman. Anyway, after about another 10 minute conversation about Obama (which I’m trying to wrap up the entire time; some people can’t take a hint…across a language barrier), Sazuel (if that’s his name- I have it on a business card, but I hope to never have to call this person, despite my respect for his obvious sales prowess) finally leaves, but not before again assuring my of his trustworthy Turkish roots. Some people are just blind to racism and stereotypes, I guess.
Anyway, I guess that wasn’t really the skinny on my entire week, but I’ll get back to it later. I’m almost to Vienna, and my trip awaits. Important note, please read: I have several Turkish friends here, and all’s good with them. They’re great people. I’m merely noting the entire world’s vast generalization of the country and its inhabitants. I’m sure it’s a beautiful, rich culture with many upstanding and honest individuals; it’s just a few really dirty, smelly A’Rabs pulling the whole country down. And let’s be honest, Constantinople was a waaaay better name before they came along.
…kidding…
Yesterday, I was in my room about to take a shower as I had just gotten back from jogging (or yogging, the “j” might be soft, I’m not certain), when there’s a knock on the door. I open the door to see a short Turkish man standing there; he quickly tells me that he wants to sign me to a different power company.
Let me press the pause button on this story and clarify something before continuing: In Europe, or at least Germany (readers of my blog will know without a doubt that there’s nothing I hate worse than making low and petty generalizations about large groups of people, of course), everything is made as inconvenient as it can possibly be made. Therefore, although I live in a dorm, I have to seek out my power and internet service or else I will have none. This is going on a bit of a tangent, but it gets worse; although there’s only one university that I attend, there are as many different offices to pay as there are different fees that I owe, meaning that I have to go to all of these places to pay. No website, credit cards never accepted, pay the bill, or go home; this is the attitude of these people. Furthermore, not only is the payment expected on time and in person, each payment has its own set of paperwork that must be shown at the time of payment, or the payment cannot be accepted. And, no, the required set of papers is not the same for every different fee; to be prepared, I now carry my passport, insurance card (which is provided by an American company), proof of refusal of German insurance (a paper I was forced to sign the first day; I don’t understand why I can’t just tell each office that I didn’t/ don’t want German insurance), proof of German bank account (being both my bank card and the paper I signed to open the account), proof of student registration (which is more than just a card), and a host of other bureaucratic nonsense everywhere I go. Ugh- Europe’s a great place to visit, but I completely understand why those dudes got on the Mayflower.
Anyway, back to the previously interrupted story: Being less than fully adept at German, I hesitate with the correct way to politely refuse the eager salesman as he is standing at my door, and he’s in my room before I know it. He explains to me that his power company will sell me power at 9 cents less per hour than my current service, and they provide environmentally friendly power exclusively. Somehow, he already has the numbers on how much power I’ve used this month (I’m 90% sure he was making these up on the spot, but I gotta hand it to the guy, this is a pretty slick move), and he shows me just how much money I would have saved with his company. Whether or not my power usage numbers were accurate, the fact remains that I’ll save money with this guy. I was still skeptical, until he pulled out a powerpoint presentation (IN A DORM ROOM) and used a laser pointer (when it was on a computer screen; seriously, a finger would have sufficed) to go through it with me. I had to indulge him; when somebody’s a true, legitimate schtick, you’ve really got no choice. True schtick is a rarity, ladies and gentlemen. At the end of this, I agree; he’ll save me some money, and I couldn’t turn down a pitch like that. Just after signing though, (not that I regret my decision, this is just funny) he reassures me that I’ve made the right choice by saying, “Trust me, I’m a Turk; I’m not like all these other Germans, just out to screw you.” Yeah, broseph, the Turks are known from Tokyo to Trinidad as being a trustworthy people; being a nation known for terrorizing Eastern Europe with seemingly random fits of invasion, not to mention being the origin of phrases like “thievin’ A-Rab,” I do trust a Turkish stranger to fix me up with a good deal on power. On his way out, he asks me if I’m his friend (not a joke), to which I have to politely respond, “Sure, why not?” He makes sure to give me his cell phone number (his reason being completely non-business related; “call me if you ever want to go to a REAL party”) and asks me for my American cell number in return, in case he “ever makes the trip.” Ok, I have to confess something here: I didn’t give him my real cell phone number. If I’d known Ben Hatch’s off the top of my head, Hatch would be getting a call from the Turkish power salesman (I think his name’s Sazuel), but, alas, I did not. Sorry, Hatch. The number I did give him? Call me homely, but the first number that came to my head was my mother’s; in any event, she’s the sort of person that would hang up on a stranger asking for her son with an exotic accent. God bless that woman. Anyway, after about another 10 minute conversation about Obama (which I’m trying to wrap up the entire time; some people can’t take a hint…across a language barrier), Sazuel (if that’s his name- I have it on a business card, but I hope to never have to call this person, despite my respect for his obvious sales prowess) finally leaves, but not before again assuring my of his trustworthy Turkish roots. Some people are just blind to racism and stereotypes, I guess.
Anyway, I guess that wasn’t really the skinny on my entire week, but I’ll get back to it later. I’m almost to Vienna, and my trip awaits. Important note, please read: I have several Turkish friends here, and all’s good with them. They’re great people. I’m merely noting the entire world’s vast generalization of the country and its inhabitants. I’m sure it’s a beautiful, rich culture with many upstanding and honest individuals; it’s just a few really dirty, smelly A’Rabs pulling the whole country down. And let’s be honest, Constantinople was a waaaay better name before they came along.
…kidding…
Monday, March 30, 2009
The John Leading the Blind
Ok, so, after having been here more than a month, there are now a few more things I’ve noticed, especially in the last week or so since I’ve last updated. Allow me to have a few laughs at the expense of others here; if it’s true, which it is (empirically), it’s fair game, get off me. Anyway, here goes:
First, I would venture to guess that 20% of the population of Nuremberg is blind. I’m not poking fun at people for having a seriously debilitating condition, I’m just making an observation here. There is an inordinate amount of blind people in this city, and I’ve witnessed some rather amazing things from these people. Let me preface these few short tales with one more observation about these people: the blind Nuremberger, whether male or female, always, repeat ALWAYS, has big balls. They are unafraid to tackle any everyday situation with as much bravado as any person with a set of eagle eyes. Case in point: less than an hour ago, I had to go to the bank, so I got on the subway to go to the Altstadt (downtown Nuremberg). I go a few stops down and get off the train and begin making my way to the escalator. As I’m walking, the train going the other way pulls up, and, when I’m closer to the stairs, the warning bell starts to ring, so people coming off the escalator begin to run to try to make the train. This sort of behavior is completely normal, but then I see something rather unexpected. The people coming off the escalator are all lined up, just due to the thing being rather narrow, so I can only see two or three people at a time coming off. A few people come off it running, and the next thing I see is a woman, going at full sprint, mind you, with a BLIND POLE in her hand. SHE’S WEARING SUNGLASSES, for Christsake, and she’s running through a densely populated, rather narrow area, without the ability to see where she’s going or how close things are to her. Ballsy, to say the least. And these people are everywhere; I saw a woman a few days ago jogging with a blind pole (I hope that’s the correct name for this; at any rate, I mean the pole they use to navigate); no seeing eye dog, no jogging partner, just a pole. Rather amazing.
They’re also rather bold in social situations, which, if you think about it, makes sense. Imagine how awkward you might feel if, when in the company of relative strangers, you run out of things to say; it’s not as though you can turn to look out the window or concentrate on a TV that might be in the area. It’s all conversation with these folks. I was in a pub last Saturday (watching the Mighty Reds of Liverpool trounce Aston Villa, 5-0) with two other guys, Mikkel and Jukka, having a Guiness and watching the football match, when I hear a voice behind me ask for help up the stair to the seating area of the place. I turn, and there stands a blind man. ‘No problem,’ I think, ‘I can take 30 seconds away from the match to help a guy out.’ 30 seconds? Guess again. I turn and offer him my hand, which he uses to guide himself between two tables and up the stair. His next question is, “Where is your table?” which leads me to think he’s going to use it as a reference point, but, no, I’m wrong again. “Immediately to your right,” I tell him, to which he replies, “Would you mind putting my drink down on it?” He next has me fetching him a chair, so there’s now no doubt about it, I’m in this for the long haul. The match is only 10 minutes old, so I’ve now got about an hour and 45 minutes of entertaining this guy when all I really want to do is watch the match, which is difficult to do simultaneously with carrying on a decent conversation in another language. Meanwhile, Mikkel and Jukka are trying to pretend they are not there so that they may watch, being free of any social responsibility; this scam doesn’t last long. Trying to be completely silent in close proximity with a blind man is like Wesley Snipes trying to avoid paying taxes- ain’t gonna to happen. But I’m still the one sitting next to him, so I’m still his main conversational conduit; I’m nice, but, as I said earlier, it’s difficult to divide my attention these circumstances, which at times gets me into trouble. Most memorably, at one point in the afternoon, the man, whose name is Peter, tells me that he really likes sports. Being that we’re watching football (soccer; America has got to drop this silly moniker- for Christsake, you use your FOOT to kick a BALL), I ask him who his favorite club is (TSV Muenchen 1860; a small club in Munich). The conversation sort of stops there, so I attempt to revive it by asking, “So do you watch many other sports?” Jukka and Mikkel give me a look of pure horror, and I then realize what I just asked a blind man. Instantly, all my internal organs melt and begin flowing into my feet, yet I never felt a stronger urge to vomit, but all is quickly relieved. Peter, not missing a beat, being the ballsy blind Nuremberger he is, says, “Just football and ice hockey.” These are the people with whom I mingle; how great is that?
Ok, so that’s stereotype #1 out of the way (blind people in Nuremberg are the Chuck Norrises of the world’s blind population). Next, being that I’m here with exchange students from all over the world, there are many more things I’ve realized about the world’s population at large. First, rather counter intuitively, the colder climate one comes from, the more one overdresses all the time (and, also, the more one is content with being consistently overdressed). Of the kids who are here, who are for the most part from Europe, I come from one of the hottest climates. There are a few kids who have me beat (a few Brazilians, a few Mexicans, an Argentine, that I know of), but, as far as averages are concerned, I’m killing most people on the heat factor. As a result of this, I tend to dress lighter than most of them, but I’m also well aware of how much a person can really sweat when pressed to it; on the other side, I would venture to guess that these kids are better aware of how cold a person can really feel, so they tend to dress heavier. But I’ve also noticed our attitudes toward temperature are different, independent of dress; I am less bothered by the cold here, but when I get on a train or go into a building, I strip my jacket and sweater faster than a jackrabbit (all the buildings are heated way too hot here, yet they also love to leave their windows open; silly Germans); for the kids from colder climates (we’re talking Denmark, Finland, Sweden, Russia, Belarus, Czech Republic, etc), they can leave their jackets on through anything, but they’re still constantly cold. Case in point, two weeks ago, I played football with some guys in a park and the temperature was probably about 40 or 45 (Fahrenheit), so, knowing the football involves almost constant running, often at a sprint, I play in shorts and short sleeves, but all, without exception, are in pants and sleeves, complaining about the cold the entire time. Of course, the Brazilian with us was in multiple layers on both his top and bottom, with a hat and gloves the whole time. I’m just going to attribute it to true American grit. Or maybe I just pine for spring. Whatever, it’s about 50 or 55 outside right now, and I’m definitely wearing Chaco’s; I’m tired of this crappy weather.
Anyway, this thing is starting to drag on, so let me end with one last comical anecdote, and I’ll save my other stuff for later. Let’s title this story “The Main Difference Between the US and Sweden;” here goes: The other day, I’m making my way home from class with my Swedish friend Erik (keep in mind he’s from Sweden, where everyone is white and blonde; it’s important to the story), and we’re walking through the train station toward the subway. For those of you who have never been in a European train station, they’re a lot like malls; you know, lots of stores and restaurants in them, aside from all the train platforms. As we’re walking, we walk by a restaurant whose tables splay out into the corridor through which people are walking, sort of like an indoor sidewalk cafĂ©. We walk by a table at which a man and woman are sitting, the man of the couple being black, and the two are speaking German with each other. And, no, it was not Heidi Klum and Seal. Anyway, I can’t remember what Erik and I are talking about at this point, but I interrupt the conversation to say to Erik, “I can’t get over how weird it is to see black people speaking German,” to which Erik replies, “I can’t get over weird it is to see black people.” What a world, eh?
First, I would venture to guess that 20% of the population of Nuremberg is blind. I’m not poking fun at people for having a seriously debilitating condition, I’m just making an observation here. There is an inordinate amount of blind people in this city, and I’ve witnessed some rather amazing things from these people. Let me preface these few short tales with one more observation about these people: the blind Nuremberger, whether male or female, always, repeat ALWAYS, has big balls. They are unafraid to tackle any everyday situation with as much bravado as any person with a set of eagle eyes. Case in point: less than an hour ago, I had to go to the bank, so I got on the subway to go to the Altstadt (downtown Nuremberg). I go a few stops down and get off the train and begin making my way to the escalator. As I’m walking, the train going the other way pulls up, and, when I’m closer to the stairs, the warning bell starts to ring, so people coming off the escalator begin to run to try to make the train. This sort of behavior is completely normal, but then I see something rather unexpected. The people coming off the escalator are all lined up, just due to the thing being rather narrow, so I can only see two or three people at a time coming off. A few people come off it running, and the next thing I see is a woman, going at full sprint, mind you, with a BLIND POLE in her hand. SHE’S WEARING SUNGLASSES, for Christsake, and she’s running through a densely populated, rather narrow area, without the ability to see where she’s going or how close things are to her. Ballsy, to say the least. And these people are everywhere; I saw a woman a few days ago jogging with a blind pole (I hope that’s the correct name for this; at any rate, I mean the pole they use to navigate); no seeing eye dog, no jogging partner, just a pole. Rather amazing.
They’re also rather bold in social situations, which, if you think about it, makes sense. Imagine how awkward you might feel if, when in the company of relative strangers, you run out of things to say; it’s not as though you can turn to look out the window or concentrate on a TV that might be in the area. It’s all conversation with these folks. I was in a pub last Saturday (watching the Mighty Reds of Liverpool trounce Aston Villa, 5-0) with two other guys, Mikkel and Jukka, having a Guiness and watching the football match, when I hear a voice behind me ask for help up the stair to the seating area of the place. I turn, and there stands a blind man. ‘No problem,’ I think, ‘I can take 30 seconds away from the match to help a guy out.’ 30 seconds? Guess again. I turn and offer him my hand, which he uses to guide himself between two tables and up the stair. His next question is, “Where is your table?” which leads me to think he’s going to use it as a reference point, but, no, I’m wrong again. “Immediately to your right,” I tell him, to which he replies, “Would you mind putting my drink down on it?” He next has me fetching him a chair, so there’s now no doubt about it, I’m in this for the long haul. The match is only 10 minutes old, so I’ve now got about an hour and 45 minutes of entertaining this guy when all I really want to do is watch the match, which is difficult to do simultaneously with carrying on a decent conversation in another language. Meanwhile, Mikkel and Jukka are trying to pretend they are not there so that they may watch, being free of any social responsibility; this scam doesn’t last long. Trying to be completely silent in close proximity with a blind man is like Wesley Snipes trying to avoid paying taxes- ain’t gonna to happen. But I’m still the one sitting next to him, so I’m still his main conversational conduit; I’m nice, but, as I said earlier, it’s difficult to divide my attention these circumstances, which at times gets me into trouble. Most memorably, at one point in the afternoon, the man, whose name is Peter, tells me that he really likes sports. Being that we’re watching football (soccer; America has got to drop this silly moniker- for Christsake, you use your FOOT to kick a BALL), I ask him who his favorite club is (TSV Muenchen 1860; a small club in Munich). The conversation sort of stops there, so I attempt to revive it by asking, “So do you watch many other sports?” Jukka and Mikkel give me a look of pure horror, and I then realize what I just asked a blind man. Instantly, all my internal organs melt and begin flowing into my feet, yet I never felt a stronger urge to vomit, but all is quickly relieved. Peter, not missing a beat, being the ballsy blind Nuremberger he is, says, “Just football and ice hockey.” These are the people with whom I mingle; how great is that?
Ok, so that’s stereotype #1 out of the way (blind people in Nuremberg are the Chuck Norrises of the world’s blind population). Next, being that I’m here with exchange students from all over the world, there are many more things I’ve realized about the world’s population at large. First, rather counter intuitively, the colder climate one comes from, the more one overdresses all the time (and, also, the more one is content with being consistently overdressed). Of the kids who are here, who are for the most part from Europe, I come from one of the hottest climates. There are a few kids who have me beat (a few Brazilians, a few Mexicans, an Argentine, that I know of), but, as far as averages are concerned, I’m killing most people on the heat factor. As a result of this, I tend to dress lighter than most of them, but I’m also well aware of how much a person can really sweat when pressed to it; on the other side, I would venture to guess that these kids are better aware of how cold a person can really feel, so they tend to dress heavier. But I’ve also noticed our attitudes toward temperature are different, independent of dress; I am less bothered by the cold here, but when I get on a train or go into a building, I strip my jacket and sweater faster than a jackrabbit (all the buildings are heated way too hot here, yet they also love to leave their windows open; silly Germans); for the kids from colder climates (we’re talking Denmark, Finland, Sweden, Russia, Belarus, Czech Republic, etc), they can leave their jackets on through anything, but they’re still constantly cold. Case in point, two weeks ago, I played football with some guys in a park and the temperature was probably about 40 or 45 (Fahrenheit), so, knowing the football involves almost constant running, often at a sprint, I play in shorts and short sleeves, but all, without exception, are in pants and sleeves, complaining about the cold the entire time. Of course, the Brazilian with us was in multiple layers on both his top and bottom, with a hat and gloves the whole time. I’m just going to attribute it to true American grit. Or maybe I just pine for spring. Whatever, it’s about 50 or 55 outside right now, and I’m definitely wearing Chaco’s; I’m tired of this crappy weather.
Anyway, this thing is starting to drag on, so let me end with one last comical anecdote, and I’ll save my other stuff for later. Let’s title this story “The Main Difference Between the US and Sweden;” here goes: The other day, I’m making my way home from class with my Swedish friend Erik (keep in mind he’s from Sweden, where everyone is white and blonde; it’s important to the story), and we’re walking through the train station toward the subway. For those of you who have never been in a European train station, they’re a lot like malls; you know, lots of stores and restaurants in them, aside from all the train platforms. As we’re walking, we walk by a restaurant whose tables splay out into the corridor through which people are walking, sort of like an indoor sidewalk cafĂ©. We walk by a table at which a man and woman are sitting, the man of the couple being black, and the two are speaking German with each other. And, no, it was not Heidi Klum and Seal. Anyway, I can’t remember what Erik and I are talking about at this point, but I interrupt the conversation to say to Erik, “I can’t get over how weird it is to see black people speaking German,” to which Erik replies, “I can’t get over weird it is to see black people.” What a world, eh?
Friday, March 20, 2009
Football: A Social Experiment
I’m going to be up front with this one; if you’re not into football (soccer, for some of you), the rest of this entry will probably mean nothing to you. You’ll probably give this about as much credit as “Big Momma’s House II,” but, if you can, I’d like you to stick with me; football is the world’s game, and its results have significant effects on societies around the world. Our collective psyche as world citizens is greatly impacted by the sport, and there are many conclusions to be drawn from it on all levels of play. If you cannot agree with any of the previous statements, please continue reading; I think the results that I witnessed today could change your mind, if not even spark your interest in the Beautiful Game. But this is a longer post, and it’s not as funny as my previous experiences here, so don’t get your hopes up if you’re in this for the laughs; this is all business, but I felt I had to write it to get my thoughts out.
Today, with five other guys, I set out from my dorm to find a park and get a match going. Our group consisted exclusively of exchange students, and we were remarkably diverse; among our number, everyone had neither the same nationality nor mothertongue. We were one Argentine, one Brazilian, one Finn, one Frenchman, one Dane, and, of course, one Yankee. It took us about half an hour, but we finally found the park we sought. There wasn’t too much action; just a few people having a kick-about, so we found an empty field to play a little three-on-three. Most of you are probably familiar with my high level of coordination, but I honestly didn’t too badly; in the 30 minutes or so that we played 3 on 3, I managed to tap in 3 goals and even stop a few, but the goals were all sitters (all I had to do was be there to poke it in; my teammates did everything else). All I did was avoid mistakes…which is easy enough to do in a six man game. Anyway, we were soon approached by another group of six guys, so the game was easy to piece together. Here’s where things get interesting; imagine the situation. We are six people who, to some extent, cannot communicate fluently. We come from six different countries, and, although all speak varying levels of English, it is easier for all to communicate in German. That is not to say that it is exactly always easy, but we certainly have more limitations than our rivals in the situation, who are all Germans. Here is where the experiment begins: how well will six people, who have problems communicating, fare in a team game against a team that has no problems whatsoever understanding one another? One more fun caveat to this whole thing: no one is really wary to exactly what’s going on here and certainly no one knows what is soon to happen.
The game begins when Nahuel, my Argentine comrade, launches the ball in the air; it now belongs to the first team to obtain it. We have me and Antoine (the Frenchman) playing in the back, me on the right and him on the left; Nahuel, Flavio (the Brazilian), and Jukka (the Finn) in the middle, mixing up specific positions as needed; Mikkel (the Dane) plays up front, roving with the movement of the ball. The Germans had a similar layout of their six men, but at the beginning of the game I’m really more worried with the fact that they, on average, are bigger than us, and the fact that they all seem to be friends, so they’ve probably played together quite a bit more. Furthermore, well aware of my own lacking athleticism, I’d really like to escape this situation without embarrassing myself; being that we’re now playing six on six, the we’re now using is larger, and my worries about defending the goal have similarly doubled.. Oh well, the game’s on; nothing else to do now but give ‘em the old college try. After scrapping about with one another in midfield, we begin to take possession with a prominent degree of dominance. We’re playing very well together by sticking to our positions and moving the ball about quite a bit. When the ball has nowhere else to go, we move it backward and try again. I’m giving it my all not to screw up, and I’m succeeding at this goal; when the ball comes to me, I usually already have a target picked out, and I put it there. When the ball goes forward, I move forward, and, when the ball comes back, I move backward. Fundamentals; easy stuff. I’m no Maradona, but I’m no McManaman either. Things really start going pretty well; I’ve been tested defensively once, and Antoine did so well that all I had to do was clean up and clear the ball out. Within 10 minutes, we’ve put one in the ol’ onion bag; within 20, we’ve got two more. This continues; we are absolutely dominating these Germans. Nahuel is linking with Mikkel like Gerrard and Torres, Jukka and Flavio are winging like Ronaldo, and Antoine is making me look like Carragher. Meanwhile, the Germans look like England trying to qualify for the Euros; I’m on Cloud 9.
After about 45 minutes of this siege on their goal, we decide to mix up teams. Now, Jukka, Mikkel, and I are playing with of the Germans with Antoine, Flavio, and Nahuel naturally on the other side. The game begins anew in a similar manner to the way it had originally; the ball is launched into the air and bodies starting moving. Again, things are similar; possession is scrappy in midfield with no one being able to hold the ball for more than one or two passes. However, the game stays this way. The ball rarely gets far from midfield, and no one can score. Whereas earlier we had seen a goal, albeit tremendously one-sided, almost every 10 to 15 minutes if not faster, now, no one was able to do anything. Possession was given away easily; passes were not linking. It was frustrating, and the game was abandoned after another 30 minutes or so. We shook hands, spoke for a little about the recent Champions’ League draw, made plans to meet again next Friday, and went out separate ways. But, upon closer examination, this was no meaningless public park pick-up game; it definitely has deeper meaning.
Consider this situation (being that the following describes perfectly the scene depicted above): two teams play one another, one consisting of six people that are more or less familiar with one another, if not outright friends, while the other consists of six people that, at the least, are relative strangers who all come from vastly different cultures and speak very different native languages. Both consist of people who are, more than likely, of average athletic talent (probably with the exception of your humble author); this can be inferred from a few pieces of evidence. First, all 12 had enough interest in playing the sport to go out to a park on a day in which the temperature was in the low 40s (Fahrenheit) with ample wind. There is no obvious reason to do this other than if the people in question simply enjoy playing the sport; the enjoyment would then indicate some level of proficiency with the skills of the game. With the exception of perhaps golf and bowling, it is frustrating, if not infuriating, to consistently play a sport at which a person is awful (I count myself as an exception to this rule, being that I have an often unhealthy obsession with the game, but, I must say, that I, on principle, do not play basketball). Furthermore, football is perhaps the most popular sport in Germany, as it is in most of western Europe; unlike us in the US, it is very common for most all children to continue playing the game seriously beyond the age of 7, and it is generally a hobby for most athletically inclined young men. This is a stereotype, I realize, but it fits for the sort of guy who goes to a public park to play when the weather feels, let’s say, just a BIT brisk. This stereotype also fits for all the other countries represented with the exception of my own. But, seriously, this study doesn’t exactly concern me personally, but I feel like I play well enough in defense to fit. Finally, there is no reason to believe that either team was chosen from any more a talented field than the other; both appeared quite random. Actually, I can say with certainty that my team was incredibly random, but our opposition portrayed the part well enough.
Given this situation, you have two teams that should stack up fairly even on one another. They had their obvious choice for an MVP award; we had our own. They had their better players, as we did, and then they had their…less talented members, just as we did, too. At very least, this should have been an even match, if not a bit in their favor given their superior communicative abilities, but we quickly took dominance and were soon bunging in the goals. Why might this be, being that it is so counter-intuitive? The answer, friends, lies in diversity. Wait, don’t stop reading yet, this isn’t just another one of those namby-pamby “let’s all bring the world together for peace” rants; this is my attempt at a serious psychological study, and I’m not finished yet. I’m not talking about diversity just for diversity’s sake; I’m talking about all the other goodies that such a diversity entails.
First, being that we all knew our language skills to be somewhat limited with one another, all our on field communication was very basic and easy to understand; we were also a little unfamiliar with the tendencies of one another. While the Germans were confident in their ability to use nonverbal communication, we were constantly using short and basic commands to help one another (“Back!”; “Behind!”; “Look left/right!”; “Here!’; etc.). Also due to the fact that we were unfamiliar with the playing styles of one another, we mostly avoided extended possessions of the ball. As a result, the ball was all over the field, each member of the team more than willing to dump it off in the face of danger. Finally, we all brought our different playing styles to the pitch, each, oddly enough, somewhat resembled the general playing styles of our homelands. I can’t really speak for how the typical Danish or Finnish player plays, but the rest of our nationalities were well represented. The Argentine dribbled with finesse, preferring to take a few touches, even when perhaps a bit unnecessary, before passing rather than play straight one-touch footie. The Brazilian preferred to move forward rather than adequately cover the pitch and tended to get creative, even when his stunts seemed rather impossible. He backed it up well, though, being successful most of the time. The Frenchman was the most vocal player on the field, and, although he was a good defender, he enjoyed more than anything, it seemed, to rove forward into the midfield and play aggressive one-touch football. Me? Well, as is the stereotypical American way, I find that I am better at sweeping up in the back and playing aggressive in defense. With these guys being generally bigger than me, I was unafraid to throw my body between the attacker and the ball, and this was fairly effective. I committed two of the four called fouls in the back, not that I’m proud of this, but I just find it tremendously stereotypical, and, therefore, funny. The two Scandinavians displayed skilled footwork in attack, but, again, I’m really unfamiliar with typical play from either of those countries.
The Germans, all together, played typical German football; they were skilled in attack, but, with no defensive base, the team was fairly impotent. They were too confident in their ability to dribble through us; they were hesitant to pass when a potential dribbling opportunity showed itself to them, and, sometimes, they attempted to play the long ball when their skill levels, like our own, really would not permit this. Nobody on that field was making a decent trap of a 35 or 40 yard pass. Just ain’t happenin’.
Finally, the point of all this is that the most effective team, all other things being equal, is the most diverse one. This is easy to see amongst the world’s top club teams (Liverpool fields just two Englishmen in its starting XI; the rest of the still remaining Champions’ League squads, possibly with the exception of Man United, whose success is another story entirely, field 6 or fewer domestic players in their starting XIs), although there are also a lot of other factors affecting this. It was certainly observed today. And being that the best team is the diverse one, there is one final conclusion to make from this little story, which is the one that makes me the happiest: The World, despite all her troubles and strife, can still work somewhere efficiently when we simply come to play football together.
Today, with five other guys, I set out from my dorm to find a park and get a match going. Our group consisted exclusively of exchange students, and we were remarkably diverse; among our number, everyone had neither the same nationality nor mothertongue. We were one Argentine, one Brazilian, one Finn, one Frenchman, one Dane, and, of course, one Yankee. It took us about half an hour, but we finally found the park we sought. There wasn’t too much action; just a few people having a kick-about, so we found an empty field to play a little three-on-three. Most of you are probably familiar with my high level of coordination, but I honestly didn’t too badly; in the 30 minutes or so that we played 3 on 3, I managed to tap in 3 goals and even stop a few, but the goals were all sitters (all I had to do was be there to poke it in; my teammates did everything else). All I did was avoid mistakes…which is easy enough to do in a six man game. Anyway, we were soon approached by another group of six guys, so the game was easy to piece together. Here’s where things get interesting; imagine the situation. We are six people who, to some extent, cannot communicate fluently. We come from six different countries, and, although all speak varying levels of English, it is easier for all to communicate in German. That is not to say that it is exactly always easy, but we certainly have more limitations than our rivals in the situation, who are all Germans. Here is where the experiment begins: how well will six people, who have problems communicating, fare in a team game against a team that has no problems whatsoever understanding one another? One more fun caveat to this whole thing: no one is really wary to exactly what’s going on here and certainly no one knows what is soon to happen.
The game begins when Nahuel, my Argentine comrade, launches the ball in the air; it now belongs to the first team to obtain it. We have me and Antoine (the Frenchman) playing in the back, me on the right and him on the left; Nahuel, Flavio (the Brazilian), and Jukka (the Finn) in the middle, mixing up specific positions as needed; Mikkel (the Dane) plays up front, roving with the movement of the ball. The Germans had a similar layout of their six men, but at the beginning of the game I’m really more worried with the fact that they, on average, are bigger than us, and the fact that they all seem to be friends, so they’ve probably played together quite a bit more. Furthermore, well aware of my own lacking athleticism, I’d really like to escape this situation without embarrassing myself; being that we’re now playing six on six, the we’re now using is larger, and my worries about defending the goal have similarly doubled.. Oh well, the game’s on; nothing else to do now but give ‘em the old college try. After scrapping about with one another in midfield, we begin to take possession with a prominent degree of dominance. We’re playing very well together by sticking to our positions and moving the ball about quite a bit. When the ball has nowhere else to go, we move it backward and try again. I’m giving it my all not to screw up, and I’m succeeding at this goal; when the ball comes to me, I usually already have a target picked out, and I put it there. When the ball goes forward, I move forward, and, when the ball comes back, I move backward. Fundamentals; easy stuff. I’m no Maradona, but I’m no McManaman either. Things really start going pretty well; I’ve been tested defensively once, and Antoine did so well that all I had to do was clean up and clear the ball out. Within 10 minutes, we’ve put one in the ol’ onion bag; within 20, we’ve got two more. This continues; we are absolutely dominating these Germans. Nahuel is linking with Mikkel like Gerrard and Torres, Jukka and Flavio are winging like Ronaldo, and Antoine is making me look like Carragher. Meanwhile, the Germans look like England trying to qualify for the Euros; I’m on Cloud 9.
After about 45 minutes of this siege on their goal, we decide to mix up teams. Now, Jukka, Mikkel, and I are playing with of the Germans with Antoine, Flavio, and Nahuel naturally on the other side. The game begins anew in a similar manner to the way it had originally; the ball is launched into the air and bodies starting moving. Again, things are similar; possession is scrappy in midfield with no one being able to hold the ball for more than one or two passes. However, the game stays this way. The ball rarely gets far from midfield, and no one can score. Whereas earlier we had seen a goal, albeit tremendously one-sided, almost every 10 to 15 minutes if not faster, now, no one was able to do anything. Possession was given away easily; passes were not linking. It was frustrating, and the game was abandoned after another 30 minutes or so. We shook hands, spoke for a little about the recent Champions’ League draw, made plans to meet again next Friday, and went out separate ways. But, upon closer examination, this was no meaningless public park pick-up game; it definitely has deeper meaning.
Consider this situation (being that the following describes perfectly the scene depicted above): two teams play one another, one consisting of six people that are more or less familiar with one another, if not outright friends, while the other consists of six people that, at the least, are relative strangers who all come from vastly different cultures and speak very different native languages. Both consist of people who are, more than likely, of average athletic talent (probably with the exception of your humble author); this can be inferred from a few pieces of evidence. First, all 12 had enough interest in playing the sport to go out to a park on a day in which the temperature was in the low 40s (Fahrenheit) with ample wind. There is no obvious reason to do this other than if the people in question simply enjoy playing the sport; the enjoyment would then indicate some level of proficiency with the skills of the game. With the exception of perhaps golf and bowling, it is frustrating, if not infuriating, to consistently play a sport at which a person is awful (I count myself as an exception to this rule, being that I have an often unhealthy obsession with the game, but, I must say, that I, on principle, do not play basketball). Furthermore, football is perhaps the most popular sport in Germany, as it is in most of western Europe; unlike us in the US, it is very common for most all children to continue playing the game seriously beyond the age of 7, and it is generally a hobby for most athletically inclined young men. This is a stereotype, I realize, but it fits for the sort of guy who goes to a public park to play when the weather feels, let’s say, just a BIT brisk. This stereotype also fits for all the other countries represented with the exception of my own. But, seriously, this study doesn’t exactly concern me personally, but I feel like I play well enough in defense to fit. Finally, there is no reason to believe that either team was chosen from any more a talented field than the other; both appeared quite random. Actually, I can say with certainty that my team was incredibly random, but our opposition portrayed the part well enough.
Given this situation, you have two teams that should stack up fairly even on one another. They had their obvious choice for an MVP award; we had our own. They had their better players, as we did, and then they had their…less talented members, just as we did, too. At very least, this should have been an even match, if not a bit in their favor given their superior communicative abilities, but we quickly took dominance and were soon bunging in the goals. Why might this be, being that it is so counter-intuitive? The answer, friends, lies in diversity. Wait, don’t stop reading yet, this isn’t just another one of those namby-pamby “let’s all bring the world together for peace” rants; this is my attempt at a serious psychological study, and I’m not finished yet. I’m not talking about diversity just for diversity’s sake; I’m talking about all the other goodies that such a diversity entails.
First, being that we all knew our language skills to be somewhat limited with one another, all our on field communication was very basic and easy to understand; we were also a little unfamiliar with the tendencies of one another. While the Germans were confident in their ability to use nonverbal communication, we were constantly using short and basic commands to help one another (“Back!”; “Behind!”; “Look left/right!”; “Here!’; etc.). Also due to the fact that we were unfamiliar with the playing styles of one another, we mostly avoided extended possessions of the ball. As a result, the ball was all over the field, each member of the team more than willing to dump it off in the face of danger. Finally, we all brought our different playing styles to the pitch, each, oddly enough, somewhat resembled the general playing styles of our homelands. I can’t really speak for how the typical Danish or Finnish player plays, but the rest of our nationalities were well represented. The Argentine dribbled with finesse, preferring to take a few touches, even when perhaps a bit unnecessary, before passing rather than play straight one-touch footie. The Brazilian preferred to move forward rather than adequately cover the pitch and tended to get creative, even when his stunts seemed rather impossible. He backed it up well, though, being successful most of the time. The Frenchman was the most vocal player on the field, and, although he was a good defender, he enjoyed more than anything, it seemed, to rove forward into the midfield and play aggressive one-touch football. Me? Well, as is the stereotypical American way, I find that I am better at sweeping up in the back and playing aggressive in defense. With these guys being generally bigger than me, I was unafraid to throw my body between the attacker and the ball, and this was fairly effective. I committed two of the four called fouls in the back, not that I’m proud of this, but I just find it tremendously stereotypical, and, therefore, funny. The two Scandinavians displayed skilled footwork in attack, but, again, I’m really unfamiliar with typical play from either of those countries.
The Germans, all together, played typical German football; they were skilled in attack, but, with no defensive base, the team was fairly impotent. They were too confident in their ability to dribble through us; they were hesitant to pass when a potential dribbling opportunity showed itself to them, and, sometimes, they attempted to play the long ball when their skill levels, like our own, really would not permit this. Nobody on that field was making a decent trap of a 35 or 40 yard pass. Just ain’t happenin’.
Finally, the point of all this is that the most effective team, all other things being equal, is the most diverse one. This is easy to see amongst the world’s top club teams (Liverpool fields just two Englishmen in its starting XI; the rest of the still remaining Champions’ League squads, possibly with the exception of Man United, whose success is another story entirely, field 6 or fewer domestic players in their starting XIs), although there are also a lot of other factors affecting this. It was certainly observed today. And being that the best team is the diverse one, there is one final conclusion to make from this little story, which is the one that makes me the happiest: The World, despite all her troubles and strife, can still work somewhere efficiently when we simply come to play football together.
Thursday, March 19, 2009
Razor Scooters, Toilet Paper, and My Teacher's Boobs
Lately, I’ve been tired. Like really tired- a lot more so than I usually am. I mean, the college student’s life is pretty exhausting to begin with, and I’ve been doing all those normal things- drinking heavily, staying up late (even when I have nothing to do and usually in combination with the drinking), waiting until the last second to study that which requires a good deal of time to learn, etc. But, then, there’s a few things that are a little more unusual; I AM in a foreign country, still trying to adapt to all these things that are new for me, which can wear on a person.
First, unlike the suburban feel of Athens, Nuremberg is definitely an urban area. You know, subways, more homeless people, wider sidewalks, the whole shebang. This brings with it a certain fascination for me. My hometown has a population 35,000 on a good day- like if we’re having a gigantic carpet sale or something. Athens, although not exactly small, is no concrete jungle; we’ve got our crazy homeless people, but you can still get about anywhere in town in less than 20 minutes. There’s stuff to do, but it’s no metropolis. Nuremberg, though, is the real deal. Let’s be frank- we have stoops here. As a result of this, I walk everywhere. Seriously, EVERYwhere. Even if I can take the subway most places, I prefer to walk when I have the time. That way, I get to see all the crazy people on the streets of such an urban center. The other day, I saw a grown man who would only walk forward with one foot. If this seems unclear, let me explain; he literally would take a step forward, but then, unlike most people who know how to walk, would only bring his other foot forward to the point that it was even with his first step. He would then step forward again with the first foot and start the whole process again. Meanwhile, he was discussing, with himself of course, something about how he shouldn’t let his children go anywhere near farms or farm animals or something. I wanted to follow him, but I figured there might be a reason why this individual was so odd, and that I may not have wanted to find out exactly what that was. Also, his peculiar walking tactics made him incredibly slow, and therefore, difficult to stay behind. One more stranger of note and I’ll move on: today, and this one is even more surprising to me than the last one, so I may have hallucinated it, but, really, I saw a grown woman using a Razor scooter as a primary means of transportation. This woman had to be in her 40s at least, and here she was, not even walking the damn thing up a hill, just pushing like a madman. I love Nuremberg.
I also have to be in class every morning at 10:15, and I’m there, with only one 15 minute break in the middle, until 1:30. “Well, John,” you might be saying, “10:15 is really not that early,” but, smartass, one must also remember that this is in Erlangen, which is a smaller town near Nuremberg. In order to get to class on time, I have to wake up at 8:15, catch the subway at 9:00 (it’s a 10 minute walk to the subway), get off at the Nuremberg train station, catch the 9:15 to Erlangen (it’s a 30 minute train ride), and then finally catch a bus for a 10 minute ride to my building. And then I repeat the process to go home. Still think you know everything? That’s what I thought…if indeed you did make the prior statement to yourself. If not, well, at least you’re now better informed of my schedule.
This class, though, is suffocating me. For the entire month of March, plus a little of April, I have this course in Erlangen. It is what the University calls an “intensive language course,” which means, that, no matter what, the only language allowed to be spoken in the room, even if it isn’t directed toward another person, is German. No exceptions, not even to talk to yourself. If you make a mistake, it’s “ach, scheiss,” not “oh, shit.” “Verdammt!” instead of “damn it!”. And, of course, fuck’s just “fuck.” Gotta love American culture swallowing the world, eh? But they seriously enforce this; my teacher is awful. This is a woman that is in dire need of two things: a sense of humor and tightly fitting brassiere. Seriously, I don’t think I’ve ever seen her smile. And, although she’s probably pushing 60, she just lets ‘em swing like she was 15 again. Really insufferable. Anyway, so the point is that sitting in this class does awful things to a person. I’ve noticed that it changes me, temporarily; I revert back to attending to my most primal of needs in the middle of it. One would think that class would stimulate a student into deeper thought and perhaps broaden his character, but this one stands in stark contrast to this logic. I am so blanketed in ennui that my thought process hibernates. Seriously, I can remember a few moments today that went something like this:
‘…Man, I wish all these people weren’t around- I’d like nothing more right now than to pick my nose…oh well, I hope break comes soon, I gotta go down to that bakery and buy a sandwich…hopefully I’ll be hungry then, not that it matters…I don’t even know what they put on those sandwiches…but I don’t care, I’ll just eat whatever they give me…screw it, if the Germans eat it, it’s gotta be ok for me, right? Of course, these are the same people that use raw ground beef as a spread…oh well, maybe I’ll even use the bathroom at the bakery, this nose thing is really bothering the heck out of me.’
Seriously, these were my thoughts until I realized how sad this was. Meanwhile, my teacher was trying to encourage us to discuss the pros and cons of the university sponsoring a program that would send high school kids out to sea for a semester to work as sailors on a trans-Atlantic sailboat. Seeing the topic of discussion, can you now really blame me?
Finally, if I haven’t already said in a previous post, I live in a dorm again. Which rocks. Kinda. But we all know how tiring it can be. Yet, there’s always people around so I shouldn’t complain. It does bring back all sorts of fond memories, such as having to carry all your groceries the long way from the parking lot, all the way through the building to your room, by which time, you are now sweating. For me, though, I don’t drive, so I have to carry them from the store. Which, here, makes you pay for grocery bags, so I often don’t get them; I just carry them in my hands. However, due to my latest dorm experience, I believe I will start shelling out the 10 cents for a bag.
We’ll begin the story with a mental exercise: think about all the things we buy from the grocery store; do we really want everyone seeing us bringing ALL of those things home? Hmm? And here’s where our story begins. I’m making my regular trek down to my neighborhood Aldi (the German Kroger; it’s only about a 7 minute walk away from my dorm) to pick up a few things I’m needing. The rooms here all have their own bathrooms and kitchens, and one must remember, that the tenant, of course, must keep himself stocked. Well, my bathroom had one roll of paper (the starter roll, I called it) when I moved in, but that was quickly expired, so, of course, I had to get some more. I was also in the market for some body wash; with delicate skin like my own, harsh bar soaps just won’t do. So I’m at the Aldi, and I’m looking through the toilet paper for the best deal. Everything seems so expensive and the biggest pack I can find only comes with 4 rolls, so I’m starting to get audibly pissed off until I finally spot Golden Boy. He’s sitting at the very end, almost hidden from view and he’s only got two of his pals left. Golden Boy is large pack of 8 rolls of environmentally-friendly, recycled-paper. He even has his own handle and a re-sealable zip-loc top. Just what the doctor ordered. Next, I turn to the soap section in pursuit of the elusive men’s body wash. Again, I’m getting nothing. And there is no liquid soap cousin of Golden Boy specifically designed for me to be seen. Reminding myself that, as an American, I have nothing to prove about my masculinity to these Germans, I grit my teeth and pick up the “tropical citrus dream” body wash. I pick up a few other things and finally check out to be on my way home. It’s about 8 or 9 pm, so everyone at the dorm is starting to go out or think about going out, and, on this particular evening, I’m of a similar opinion, but being that this is one of my first days in the building, I don’t know many people yet. Oh, but Lady Luck hadn’t forgotten me…or had she? I’m walking up the stairs when a cute blonde Danish girl I recognized from orientation catches my eye.
“Hello, I’m Sanne,” she says, “you’re an exchange student, right?”
“Uh…yeah…that’s me,” I respond, caught off guard. You’ve got to remember, I’m holding in my hands some very embarrassing loot. I’m trying to look cool in front of this girl while I have in my hands, most prominently to her view, the jumbo pack of toilet paper and women’s body wash. I’m also sweating a little because I’m carrying a case of water in my backpack, and there’s no elevator in the building (I’m also wearing a flannel shirt and my jacket because it’s cold out; get off me, this IS normal). Real smooth; I look like a single dad on a typical Monday night.
“Well, if you don’t have any other plans tonight, I’m going to meet up with several of the other exchange students; do you want to come with?”
“Well, yeah, but...” I say, trying to think of something to say that might break this awkwardness. “Well,” I finally finish, gesturing to my body wash, “I…uh…kinda need to shower.” Note to self: that was definitely not the rescuing witty comment. But I still got her phone number and met up with the group later. It was a good night, but it still began with a most awkward beginning, as you probably can tell. Oh, well, I’m still in the game here, and, as long as I’m in the line-up, I’m still playing ball, and that’s all I need.
First, unlike the suburban feel of Athens, Nuremberg is definitely an urban area. You know, subways, more homeless people, wider sidewalks, the whole shebang. This brings with it a certain fascination for me. My hometown has a population 35,000 on a good day- like if we’re having a gigantic carpet sale or something. Athens, although not exactly small, is no concrete jungle; we’ve got our crazy homeless people, but you can still get about anywhere in town in less than 20 minutes. There’s stuff to do, but it’s no metropolis. Nuremberg, though, is the real deal. Let’s be frank- we have stoops here. As a result of this, I walk everywhere. Seriously, EVERYwhere. Even if I can take the subway most places, I prefer to walk when I have the time. That way, I get to see all the crazy people on the streets of such an urban center. The other day, I saw a grown man who would only walk forward with one foot. If this seems unclear, let me explain; he literally would take a step forward, but then, unlike most people who know how to walk, would only bring his other foot forward to the point that it was even with his first step. He would then step forward again with the first foot and start the whole process again. Meanwhile, he was discussing, with himself of course, something about how he shouldn’t let his children go anywhere near farms or farm animals or something. I wanted to follow him, but I figured there might be a reason why this individual was so odd, and that I may not have wanted to find out exactly what that was. Also, his peculiar walking tactics made him incredibly slow, and therefore, difficult to stay behind. One more stranger of note and I’ll move on: today, and this one is even more surprising to me than the last one, so I may have hallucinated it, but, really, I saw a grown woman using a Razor scooter as a primary means of transportation. This woman had to be in her 40s at least, and here she was, not even walking the damn thing up a hill, just pushing like a madman. I love Nuremberg.
I also have to be in class every morning at 10:15, and I’m there, with only one 15 minute break in the middle, until 1:30. “Well, John,” you might be saying, “10:15 is really not that early,” but, smartass, one must also remember that this is in Erlangen, which is a smaller town near Nuremberg. In order to get to class on time, I have to wake up at 8:15, catch the subway at 9:00 (it’s a 10 minute walk to the subway), get off at the Nuremberg train station, catch the 9:15 to Erlangen (it’s a 30 minute train ride), and then finally catch a bus for a 10 minute ride to my building. And then I repeat the process to go home. Still think you know everything? That’s what I thought…if indeed you did make the prior statement to yourself. If not, well, at least you’re now better informed of my schedule.
This class, though, is suffocating me. For the entire month of March, plus a little of April, I have this course in Erlangen. It is what the University calls an “intensive language course,” which means, that, no matter what, the only language allowed to be spoken in the room, even if it isn’t directed toward another person, is German. No exceptions, not even to talk to yourself. If you make a mistake, it’s “ach, scheiss,” not “oh, shit.” “Verdammt!” instead of “damn it!”. And, of course, fuck’s just “fuck.” Gotta love American culture swallowing the world, eh? But they seriously enforce this; my teacher is awful. This is a woman that is in dire need of two things: a sense of humor and tightly fitting brassiere. Seriously, I don’t think I’ve ever seen her smile. And, although she’s probably pushing 60, she just lets ‘em swing like she was 15 again. Really insufferable. Anyway, so the point is that sitting in this class does awful things to a person. I’ve noticed that it changes me, temporarily; I revert back to attending to my most primal of needs in the middle of it. One would think that class would stimulate a student into deeper thought and perhaps broaden his character, but this one stands in stark contrast to this logic. I am so blanketed in ennui that my thought process hibernates. Seriously, I can remember a few moments today that went something like this:
‘…Man, I wish all these people weren’t around- I’d like nothing more right now than to pick my nose…oh well, I hope break comes soon, I gotta go down to that bakery and buy a sandwich…hopefully I’ll be hungry then, not that it matters…I don’t even know what they put on those sandwiches…but I don’t care, I’ll just eat whatever they give me…screw it, if the Germans eat it, it’s gotta be ok for me, right? Of course, these are the same people that use raw ground beef as a spread…oh well, maybe I’ll even use the bathroom at the bakery, this nose thing is really bothering the heck out of me.’
Seriously, these were my thoughts until I realized how sad this was. Meanwhile, my teacher was trying to encourage us to discuss the pros and cons of the university sponsoring a program that would send high school kids out to sea for a semester to work as sailors on a trans-Atlantic sailboat. Seeing the topic of discussion, can you now really blame me?
Finally, if I haven’t already said in a previous post, I live in a dorm again. Which rocks. Kinda. But we all know how tiring it can be. Yet, there’s always people around so I shouldn’t complain. It does bring back all sorts of fond memories, such as having to carry all your groceries the long way from the parking lot, all the way through the building to your room, by which time, you are now sweating. For me, though, I don’t drive, so I have to carry them from the store. Which, here, makes you pay for grocery bags, so I often don’t get them; I just carry them in my hands. However, due to my latest dorm experience, I believe I will start shelling out the 10 cents for a bag.
We’ll begin the story with a mental exercise: think about all the things we buy from the grocery store; do we really want everyone seeing us bringing ALL of those things home? Hmm? And here’s where our story begins. I’m making my regular trek down to my neighborhood Aldi (the German Kroger; it’s only about a 7 minute walk away from my dorm) to pick up a few things I’m needing. The rooms here all have their own bathrooms and kitchens, and one must remember, that the tenant, of course, must keep himself stocked. Well, my bathroom had one roll of paper (the starter roll, I called it) when I moved in, but that was quickly expired, so, of course, I had to get some more. I was also in the market for some body wash; with delicate skin like my own, harsh bar soaps just won’t do. So I’m at the Aldi, and I’m looking through the toilet paper for the best deal. Everything seems so expensive and the biggest pack I can find only comes with 4 rolls, so I’m starting to get audibly pissed off until I finally spot Golden Boy. He’s sitting at the very end, almost hidden from view and he’s only got two of his pals left. Golden Boy is large pack of 8 rolls of environmentally-friendly, recycled-paper. He even has his own handle and a re-sealable zip-loc top. Just what the doctor ordered. Next, I turn to the soap section in pursuit of the elusive men’s body wash. Again, I’m getting nothing. And there is no liquid soap cousin of Golden Boy specifically designed for me to be seen. Reminding myself that, as an American, I have nothing to prove about my masculinity to these Germans, I grit my teeth and pick up the “tropical citrus dream” body wash. I pick up a few other things and finally check out to be on my way home. It’s about 8 or 9 pm, so everyone at the dorm is starting to go out or think about going out, and, on this particular evening, I’m of a similar opinion, but being that this is one of my first days in the building, I don’t know many people yet. Oh, but Lady Luck hadn’t forgotten me…or had she? I’m walking up the stairs when a cute blonde Danish girl I recognized from orientation catches my eye.
“Hello, I’m Sanne,” she says, “you’re an exchange student, right?”
“Uh…yeah…that’s me,” I respond, caught off guard. You’ve got to remember, I’m holding in my hands some very embarrassing loot. I’m trying to look cool in front of this girl while I have in my hands, most prominently to her view, the jumbo pack of toilet paper and women’s body wash. I’m also sweating a little because I’m carrying a case of water in my backpack, and there’s no elevator in the building (I’m also wearing a flannel shirt and my jacket because it’s cold out; get off me, this IS normal). Real smooth; I look like a single dad on a typical Monday night.
“Well, if you don’t have any other plans tonight, I’m going to meet up with several of the other exchange students; do you want to come with?”
“Well, yeah, but...” I say, trying to think of something to say that might break this awkwardness. “Well,” I finally finish, gesturing to my body wash, “I…uh…kinda need to shower.” Note to self: that was definitely not the rescuing witty comment. But I still got her phone number and met up with the group later. It was a good night, but it still began with a most awkward beginning, as you probably can tell. Oh, well, I’m still in the game here, and, as long as I’m in the line-up, I’m still playing ball, and that’s all I need.
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