30 March 2014

Playing Catch Up

     I realized recently that I've been neglecting writing about my real life here in Bratislava because I'm so behind on my Italy posts, and that's not really fair. However beautiful Italy was, Bratislava is so much more my life that not writing about it because it's not as exciting is stupid. I will continue to post about my Italian adventures as time allows, but I'm not going to put everything else on hold because of it. So here goes. An update on my life in Slovakia.

City center from the walls of the castle.
School: It's hard to believe that I've been teaching for almost two months. The time has absolutely flown by. I've learned so much in these past two months it would be impossible to describe all of it, and it would probably bore you all to death anyway. So I'll summarize. The first several weeks, even up until spring break, I was primarily trying not to drown beneath everything I was doing: planning classes, grading assignments, figuring out the various systems for grades, attendance, and substituting. It was rough. There were times I'd go into class not really having a clue what I was going to teach these kids for the next 45 minutes, and need to think on my feet to fill up the time, sometimes more successfully than others. Also, I just didn't (and still don't) feel old enough to have authority over these kids. Yes, I'm 24, and I have a college degree, I know that. But I don't feel that old, and it took a while before I was able to convince myself that I could, in fact, tell these kids what to do, and grade their essays, and ask them to behave in class. There were absolutely moments where I wanted to break into tears, and there were moments when I did. I was overwhelmed, unsure, and self-conscious of the fact that I didn't have the faintest clue what I was doing. As a die-hard perfectionist, and my own worst critic, I was tearing myself apart. I had good days, but I was concentrating on the bad ones. There was no middle ground for me; I was either a really good teacher, or someone who couldn't accomplish anything in the classroom. It sucked.
     But I don't feel that way anymore. Or rather, I feel that way significantly less often than I did before. Don't get me wrong, it's still really difficult, and I still feel like I want to pull my hair out sometimes, but I'm learning how to cope. I've started planning lessons out more than a day at a time. I'm able to cut myself some slack and not grade papers the day they're handed in to me. I've gotten more comfortable with my students and am able to relax more in front of the classes. I've realized I don't have to be a "teacher". I have to be me, as a teacher, and that's probably what has helped the most.
UFO Bridge and Petrzalka from the Castle.
    Though much about teaching has gotten easier in the last couple months, there are things that have gotten harder. I started teaching, as many people do, with thoughts of inspiring young minds, of eager students with good questions, wanting to be taught. While those things may exist in some places, they don't here. I know my classes better than that, and am able to recognize that, with a few exceptions, no matter what I do, no matter how well I plan out my lessons or how thoughtfully I grade their papers, they're still not going to appreciate it. It's discouraging, to say the least. My naivete, while mostly a burden, was also a little bit of a blessing.  I'm still on the fence about whether I want to keep teaching or not but at least now I know that when I do have to answer that question sometime in the relatively near future, I'll have an answer based neither on fear nor optimism. I'll have an answer based on real life.

Bratislava: You may recall that my first impression of Bratislava was not the greatest. I thought the city was, for the most part, ugly, dirty, inconvenient, and frustrating. That opinion has definitely changed. Spring came early to Slovakia this year, and it has been very kind to us. While my family in Minnesota was buried under drifts of snow, the trees were starting to turn green, the sky was consistently blue, and I was able to go outside with bare limbs. The last month has been absolutely gorgeous, even during the cold snap we had the temperature barely got down to freezing even at night. The city has come alive. Walking around downtown and seeing all the cafes and restaurants with their tables out along the sidewalk instead of jumbled all together inside, being able to have an ice cream cone (for significantly less than a euro) and not worry about shivering, wandering through the city center at night in a light jacket comfortably, all these things have greatly increased my appreciation for Bratislava. It really is quite a nice little city.
Along the canal in Petrzalka.
     Even Petrzalka is growing on me. Last week I went for a walk along the canal and discovered a lake! A little lake, but a lake nonetheless. With the grass turning green and the trees starting to blossom, even the concrete blocks start to look less foreboding.
     At some point I'm going to have to force myself to sit down and write about Bratislava. The problem is that now that I've lived here, I'm recognizing things that a visitor wouldn't. I can't be as flighty as I can be with other cities. Bratislava is more than a place I've visited, it's become a place I've lived, and that makes it infinitely more difficult to document. It's more than the buildings, more than the atmosphere, even more than the contrasting elements of it's history. It's complicated, and what's more, I understand that it's complicated. Florence, for all of it's loveliness, has to have some complications, but I can go there and not see them, because they're well hidden from the eyes of casual tourists. Day-trippers don't want complicated, they want the Duomo and the Uffizi, so that's what they get. Even if Abbie and I did stray from the tourist track, we were still only in Florence for two and a half days, not nearly enough time to become more than acquaintances.
     But that's not real life. Bratislava is real life. It's a real city, with real problems, problems that I have experienced, problems that, even if I can never understand them, I can recognize. At the same time, it has more joy hidden in it than I've seen so far, more to offer that I have yet to take advantage of. There's so much more, of everything. That's why it's so hard for me to write about Bratislava, and maybe that's part of the reason I've been putting this off. I know too much about the city to write from a tourist's perspective and not enough to write from a resident's perspective.
     So I guess that's where I have to leave it. That's my life, in the smallest of nutshells. I'm going to try my darndest to write more frequently, about Italy, about the impromptu day trip we took to Budapest, about what I'm doing here as a Bratislavan, about what I'm thinking as I move forward into the future and about the decisions that are, once again, going to have to be made about my life and how I want to live it.

23 March 2014

Siena: Vague Historic Dust

     On our last day in Florence we decided to venture out into the Tuscan countryside and spend the day in Siena, a medieval hill-town about two hours away by train. We stopped by the Duomo again to take another stab at acquiring a trash can on which to place Charlie for a picture, and finally we were successful and turned towards the train station with unburdened consciences. The train ride was beautiful, and we disembarked at the Siena station eager to explore this town we knew almost nothing about. We were initially frustrated by the lack of information about how to get from the station into the centre of town because though the sun was shining bright and warm, it was still February and solidly in low tourist season. Eventually we did manage to purchase bus tickets without having to ask for help and made an educated guess as to which bus to take. We were right, as it turned out, and we followed the crowds from the broad modern streets into the narrow passageways of the medieval centre and were lost to the world.
     Our first, and only real goal for the day was to find the Piazza del Campo, so we followed the signs along the winding streets, gaping at how well-preserved, how alive this city seemed. Despite the narrow-ness of the streets, people, cars and bikes all carefully made their way up and down the hills, sometimes with calls too close for comfort. Having spirited some uneaten croissants away from the hostel that morning, we somehow needed to find some other food before doing much exploring. Stumbling upon a supermarket, we ventured inside and successfully purchased two blocks of cheese, and several apples which we crammed into our bags, unwilling to eat them until we had found somewhere other than a street corner to sit down. Giddy with excitement about having food and being in this remarkable town, we walked down the street arm in arm. Not long after that, I started to notice passageways heading off to the left, and down. They were small, so I ignored them, but then there was one I couldn't ignore. This one was wider, lined with tacky souvenirs, and the light at the bottom of the staircase shone brightly. Our arms came unlinked as we carefully made our way down the stairs, and my eyes got bigger as more of the square gradually came into view.
     And there it was, the famous Piazza del Campo. We stood on the very rim of a giant shell, our eyes blinking in the sudden sunlight. Anchoring the square was the Palazzo Pubblico at the bottom and dozens of buildings all around the rim as if without them the entire square would crumble into the volcano over which it's built. We found a place on the square amidst the other small groups gathered there and ate our lunch, astounded by what we had discovered almost entirely by accident.
     Although the town claims to have been founded by Senius, the nephew of Romulus, the founder of Rome, it did not thrive under Roman rule, being located far from any major roads. It wasn't until the Lombard occupation sometime around the 6th century that it gained importance as a trading post, with the necessity of rerouting trade routes to avoid the Byzantine raids along the old Roman roads. After the Lombards surrendered to Charlemagne in 774 it was passed between various rulers, until the unification of Italy during the 19th century. Since then, the city has thrived as a tourist destination, a centre for humanist studies, and as an agricultural producer.
     After finishing our lunch we headed back out into the city, ready for whatever we happened to find. We passed through several beautiful courtyards, lovely in their fading beauty, clearly cherished by the population. We soon found ourselves searching for the Cathedral, which we found, and which took our breath away with it's beauty, and sheer size. Though smaller than the Duomo in Florence, it seemed larger, being surrounded by such a warren of streets. It was unexpected, this massive building situated in such a small city on top of a hill. We discovered with regret that in order to go inside you need to purchase a ticket, so we resigned ourselves to admiring the exterior, a very respectable consolation prize.
     After leaving the cathedral square, we spent the rest of the day exploring the city. We found it is nearly impossible to get lost in Siena, as long as you stay within the confines of the old city walls. Though you may never know exactly where you will end up when turning a particular corner, you can be sure that eventually the labyrinth of streets will guide you back to the Campo. I suppose that's one of the benefits of living at the top of a hill with such clearly defined boundaries, whatever other drawbacks such a situation may possess.
     At one point during our ramblings we noticed a sign that pointed to the Porto San Marco, the Gate of Saint Mark. Without a real intention of doing so, we began wandering downhill and came upon an old gate, which was beautiful in itself, but even more spectacular for what lay beyond. As we passed under the pedestrian archway, my jaw dropped. Immediately in front of us was a small plateau with a playground, and the the ground dropped away to reveal the Tuscan hillside under the party sunny sky. I sped my pace up, anxious to get a closer look, and I was not disappointed. Both of us tried to capture the rolling hills and distant villas on our cameras, knowing the whole time that no picture could do it justice. We stood in silence, much as we had done on the Piazzelle Michelangelo, trying to sear the image into our memories. My admiration of Siena turned to vague disbelief at what the walls and tall buildings were shutting out and how casually it was reintroduced.
     We gradually made our way back to the Campo where we got more gelato, which was both cheaper and better than the gelato in Florence. Go figure. As we made our way back to catch the bus we amused ourselves by deciding which dentist's office we would frequent as Siena residents, which stores we would shop at. Part of the charm of Siena was how seamlessly the past wove itself into the lives of people in the present. Florence gave the impression that although it would always protect it's treasures, it was willing to evolve with its people. Siena did not. Yes, there have been several concessions made to the demands of modernity, but overall the city seems to have changed very little over the centuries. Florence is a city with beautiful buildings housing great works of art and hundreds of years of historical importance. Siena is a museum in which people live out their daily lives casually, without pretense. Siena would come to provide a stark contrast to Venice, another Italian city that has become a museum, with much different results.
     We found ourselves back at the bus stop after several detours, including one to a beautiful church and it's parking lot which provided us with yet another stunning Tuscan panorama, with a little time to spare. So we walked along the ramparts of the old Medici fortress, now connected to the rest of the city by recent growth, and which has been turned into a park providing stunning views of the city from above. I couldn't stop smiling. It had been such a perfect day, in such an unexpectedly perfect city.
     Thinking back on it, Siena is no more perfect than any other city. There is a distinct lack of green space, the only glimpses of nature we found were those hidden from sight by the walls of the city. And although we were not the only tourists, the number of people was manageable, which would not be the case at the height of the tourist season. It would be miserable then, crowded against the unyielding stone buildings, trying to navigate the streets with hundreds of people lost in their guidebooks. Summer would also bring unbearable heat to the maze of streets, and breezes would be almost non-existent. No wonder the city felt the need to build such a beautiful Piazza. And in winter, if there was any snow or ice at all, the streets would become impassable. No, Siena is not perfect. But for us, for that one day, it was. And that's enough.

14 March 2014

Firenze: Old Souls in New Forms

     Disembarking from the train in Florence was like stepping into a whole new world after Milan. We'd both fallen asleep after leaving the city, despite Abbie's determination to stay awake and write. I woke up in the dark of the Bologna train station, our approximate half way point. After that, the train, which was a high speed train (we had not realized this when we bought the tickets, otherwise we would have understood why they were so expensive and probably gone to look for other options) dashed in and out of tunnels, giving me glimpses of the Tuscan countryside. Outside Milan had looked just like Iowa. The fleeting teasers of Tuscany looked nothing like Iowa. So it was with a light heart, if heavy eyes, that I stepped out into Florence.
Now, Florence has done a lot of things right. It's a beautiful city, with a wonderful heritage that stretches back centuries and houses the works of some of the greatest artists who have ever lived. The city seems to be proud of this, and rightly so. They have put great effort into preserving the atmosphere of what was once the city of the Medici's. Except for the train station. The train station is a remnant of the 1950's with it's cement blocks, rounded corners, and windowless facades. We were ever so slightly dismayed, but our dismay quickly turned to awe as we rounded the corner of a church courtyard and found ourselves in the Piazza Santa Maria Novella. The square has everything a square should have: a fountain, a church, green space, and benches. The church is clearly the centerpiece, but the surrounding buildings hold their own as well. It was beautiful.

     The sun was shining, and all of the sudden we were undeniably in Italy. We could see the top of the Duomo as we wandered around the various streets trying to find our hostel, before stumbling upon it far closer to the square than we had thought possible. We climbed the three flights of stairs, checked in, and dumped our bags onto the twin beds they'd assigned to us. We looked askance at the shower standing casually in the corner of the room, the only barrier being the semi-opaque glass of the shower itself. Abbie went to the bathroom and came back with a sigh of relief. "There are normal showers in there. With doors.", she said. And with that, we left the hostel, diving back into the Tuscan sun.
     Our plan was, as it tends to be, fairly vague. We knew we wanted to see the Duomo, and the Medici Chapel, etc., but we didn't have a set route we were going to follow, or certain streets to walk down. If we had, we would have lost out on some beautiful moments. We had managed to get a hold of a free map on one of the brochures advertising Tuscan day-trips, and with little more than: "Let's go there!", we began our Florentine adventures. 
     Since our appetite for the cathedral with the famous dome had been whetted by the brief glimpses we'd had of it on our search for the hostel, and because we knew roughly in which direction it lay, we decided to start there. As we scrambled around construction scaffolding and around tour groups, watching the Dome gradually become larger, I became more and more giddy. 
     It didn't take long, and before we realized just how close we were, we rounded a corner, and my jaw dropped. The corner we had just rounded opened up onto the piazza in front of the Basilica di Santa Maria del Fiore. The Duomo, as it is more commonly known, was gigantic. From where we stood it looked like it could never possibly end. But not only was it huge, it was decorated in the most elaborately detailed geometric designs I've ever seen on a building. The entire thing. Many of the churches in Florence had rough exteriors with an elaborately decorated fronting. Not this one. It's the real deal, from the tip of the dome to the lowliest cornerstone. Not that the other churches aren't spectacular as well, but this cathedral is in a category of it's own. We stood there for several long minutes, both of us tipping our heads to the sky, searching vainly for some limit to this spectacular building. It's overpowering, yet welcoming, a symbol of strength, but as delicate as a piece of lace. 

And then we went inside. As intricate and overwhelming as the exterior was, the interior was atmospheric and wholly awe-inspiring. It was almost simple. Unlike the Gothic arches of Notre Dame, the lines were clean, uninterrupted. The floor tiling was detailed, creating an illusion of swirling lines underneath the soaring ceiling. There was a massive 24 hour clock right underneath the stained glass window, and paintings over all the walls. As I moved deeper into the thick air of the cathedral, the underside of the dome slowly came into view, and my breath caught with anticipation. Finally, I tilted my head all the way back, and almost fell over backwards. From the center of the circle underneath the dome, it looks like a flat painting. All the sudden, I realized why the rest of the interior was so clean. If there was any more carving or sculptures, this spectacular dome would be lost in the chaos. As we made our way back out into the sunshine, the calm, damp air of the cathedral carried me out back into the hustle and bustle of Florence, and I knew this was a building I would never forget.
     For the rest of the day we wandered around the city, circling around mysterious green domes, inadvertently wandering into workaday Florence. We passed through the neglected Piazza Del'Annunziata, rested on a bench in Piazza San Marco, and met up with David. Finally, we walked through the Uffizi gallery and landed near Ponte Vecchio on the banks of the Arno, with late afternoon light slanting over the colorful shops sticking out from over the sides of the bridge. Abbie's smiles shone and our laughter echoed as we leaned over the river, straining to hear the water over the traffic immediately behind us. Even after a day in the sun, it was still hard to believe we were really here, really in Italy. We made our way back along the banks of the river and back to our piazza for gelato which we ate as the sun sank behind the ring of buildings. We turned in early, tired from our first day of vacation, but beyond ready for the next one.

     Day 2 began with the hostel breakfast, a smorgasbord of cereal, bread, cheese, croissants, and brightly colored juices. It was cheap and surprisingly delicious. That day we were planning to visit the Medici chapel with the Michelangelo sculptures and wander the other side of the Arno, beginning with climbing the hill to Piazelle Michelangelo and see the city we'd been exploring from above. So that's what we did. The chapel, which was one of the only things we paid for on this trip, was gorgeous. There's the main chapel with marble walls soaring to the ceiling (another dome) which is painted with an odd assortment of Bible stories. There was construction going on, which was a little disappointing, but I'd rather restore it now than not have it later. Plus, it was still one of the most beautiful places I've ever been. Then, Abbie giddy with excitement, we moved into the smaller chapel where several of the Medici's are buried surrounded by Michelangelo sculptures. I'd never been so close to one before, and it really did seem like they could come to life. It was astounding. We then briefly detoured back to the Duomo for a Charlie attempt which fell apart as stubborn tourists felt the need to stand directly in front of all the trash cans I wanted to use. We vowed to return and continued on.
     We wandered into the Piazza Santa Croce almost by accident, and were pleasantly surprised by what we found there. The church looks remarkably similar to Santa Maria Novella, with a giant statue of Dante outside. The buildings around the square were painted with faded frescoes, and the colors exploded into the bright sunlight. We both took off our jackets, reveling in the warmth we'd been missing in Paris and Bratislava. The best thing about the piazza though, was how genuine it felt. It's a famous church with frescoes by Giotto inside, but the throngs around the Duomo were almost entirely absent. But it was more than the absence of tourists that made it feel real. There were people living in those frescoed buildings, and it was easy to see how. There was so much life, you couldn't help wanting to join in and be a part of it.
     After crossing the river, we began the climb up to the Piazelle. The path zig-zagged up the hill, giving us teasing glances of the views we'd see when we did finally get to the top. And then we did, and it was beyond words. The entire city was laid out before us, with the Duomo and tower of the Palazzo Vecchio soaring into the air. The hills around the city created a cradle which has nourished so much genius it was hard to comprehend. A bright blue sky arched above the whole city, with hardly a cloud. It was easy to imagine how the Medici's could have thought they ruled the world, standing up here, looking down at the maze-like city streets. We stood there in silence for several minutes, each lost in thought, not needing to share any of this quite yet.
     When we did finally break out of our trance, we giggled through several pictures, then moved further into what was essentially a parking lot. The view is what brings people here, not the setting. Moving further up the hill we spotted a church and decided to head in that direction. Another set of stairs later, we once again stared down in awe at Florence before turning our attention to the church of San Miniato del Monte. It was (and maybe still is) a monastery, so the grounds around the church are full of extravagant tombstones. Once again, the facade was eerily similar to the others we'd seen that day, but there was nothing to compare to the inside. It's a small church, but the reverence I'd felt in the Duomo quickly shrunk to admiration. This was a real church. The air was so thick it almost felt smoky, and the sun shining through the windows created paths down to the tiled floor. The altar glowed with a quiet light. Frescoes lined the walls, with one unfinished painting at the far end. Behind the altar, and down a short, steep set of stairs was a crypt. Our footsteps broke into the thick silence, and I felt almost intrusive. We lingered there, slowly making our way through the church. When we did finally leave, I was startled by seeing Florence laid out before me. I had completely forgotten where we were.
     Our next destination was the Boboli Gardens, tucked away behind Pitti Palace. Well, we found the palace, but couldn't figure out where the gardens were. We found the buildings where Elizabeth Barret Browning and Fyodor Dostoevsky had lived, but still no gardens. Finally we rounded a corner going the correct direction, and ended up facing a closed gate. The Italian guys who had turned the same corner right before us volubly informed us that the gardens were closed. We then proceeded to spend quite a lot of time attempting to find our way into the garden, most of which consisted of wandering up and down narrow streets on a significant incline. Finally, our legs already tired from having climbed the giant hill earlier that day, and all the walking since then, we gave up and began searching for a place to have dinner instead. We later found out that the gardens are not only closed on the fourth Monday of each month, which this was, but also that they cost 7 euro to get into, which is absurd. The Uffizi costs less than that. So it was probably a good thing we hadn't ever found it, because we probably would have felt obligated to pay considering how much effort we would have expended getting there.
     The restaurant we ate at that night ended up being back on our own little square. We each ordered a pizza, hers with mozzarella and basil, mine with eggplant and zucchini, a pleasant surprise. It was the most delicious pizza I have ever eaten in my life. After dinner, we walked back to the river and perched on the edge of one of the bridges to watch the sunset. As we talked, Florence buzzed around us and the sun slowly turned the buildings golden, then purple, and finally they were nothing but silhouettes against the Easter egg sky. Despite the chilliness of the post-dusk air, we stopped and got gelato before turning in for the night.
     Florence was astounding. It was beautiful, yes, but it was compelling as well. It invited you to come in and stay a little. It was colorful and warm, even in February. It was a city that was Florence but also Florence. It seemed very livable, as long as you could escape the tourists during the summer. The charm of the city was not only it's beauty or it's history, but also it's present. It pulls you in, makes you feel at home. The frescoes on the walls, the innumerable churches, the winding streets and the hints of Tuscan countryside through a row of buildings, and yes, the crowds of people all speak to what Florence is. But unlike other popular tourist cities, Florence would survive, even thrive, if no one came to see it. Lives would continue on, amidst the shadows of the past, and the city's glorious history remembered, if only by itself.
   

06 March 2014

Milano: The Last of the Prose

     I'm sorry. Getting the ball rolling on blogging about Italy has been a long time coming. I had hoped to be much further along by now, instead of still pawing at the gate. As soon as I got home Sunday morning, after an overnight train from Venice to Vienna and then navigating the Vienna Metro before jumping onto a train 5 minutes before it left, I collapsed into bed, and barely left it all day. And then school started, and with it all the work that I hadn't done while I was in Italy on top of all the new stuff I had. And blogging got buried under real life. It's been hard, bringing myself back here to write. Not just because my head is so full that it's exhausting trying to pull it back into the vacation mindset, but because it means I'm not actually on vacation anymore. I'm not in Italy. I'm in Bratislava, living a real life. And as much as I appreciate living a real life, I could definitely have used a little more vacation. But, here goes. Day 1 of Italy: Milan.
     My trip to Italy began with a very early morning in Bratislava. What with needing to be at the airport by 7am after a half hour bus trip, and the necessity of leaving things in reasonably good order at the flat, I got about 5.5 hours of sleep, so I was exhausted. I almost nodded off on the bus several times. Checking in and going through security at the Bratislava airport at 7 in the morning is easily the smoothest, quickest airport experience I've ever had. There were no lines, less waiting, and even less stress. Airports and flying are not my favorite things in the world, so I was very grateful to have this trip start out on a good note. As I watched the sun rise over the mountains surrounding Bratislava I smiled, knowing how lucky I was to be living my life in that exact moment.
     It was a very uneventful flight; I slept the entire way to Bergamo, a town about 45 km outside Milan with an airport that has become increasingly popular with budget airlines like Ryanair. From the airport, I caught a bus into the city center. Now, my first view of Italy had been of the foothills of the mountains (which we Minnesotans would call actual mountains), on which Bergamo perches. I was so caught off guard with eyes blinking blearily in the light, that I actually gasped upon exiting the plane and realizing where I was. That awe lasted for about 5 minutes after getting on the bus. Once we left the vicinity of the airport and were well on our way through the town of Bergamo, Italy deteriorated quickly.
     I always forget that Italy, like most other countries, has modernized relatively quickly over the past 150 years or so, and even more quickly since World War II. And if I can't remember that, how could I be expected to remember that the majority of this industrialization happened in the north? Well, I don't think I'm ever going to forget that again. The bus ride from Bergamo to Milan was one of the least picturesque trips I've ever experienced. The towns were squat little collections of concrete blocks built around factories with smokestacks hundreds of feet tall. The countryside consisted of brownish, greyish grass surrounding ramshackle huts. I was not enchanted.
     We finally got to Milan's central train station and I disembarked from the bus into the relatively balmy air, ready to face 7 hours alone before meeting Abbie's train right back here. I had planned to drop by the hostel first and leave my things there, but I realized on the bus that were I to get anywhere in the vicinity of a bed, I would fall asleep, not see any of Milan at all, and have to make two round trips on the Metro with nothing to show for it. So instead I stored my luggage at the train station and ventured out into the city without a map.
     Here's what I liked about Milan: the people. In the first park I found, there were teenagers hanging out on benches, young parents taking their children on walks or bike rides, people of all ages trailing behind dogs, readers absorbed in books, and shopkeepers selling flowers from newsstands at the corners. They all seemed so happy to be outside, as if this was one of the first nice days of the year (as it very well could have been. It was still February.). So as I sat reading Of Mice and Men, I soaked in the ambiance of the Milanese people who were real enough to spend their Saturdays in the park instead of at stores.
     So here's what I didn't like about Milan: nearly everything else. Although part of the problem may have stemmed from my not having a map, I did not see much to appreciate in Milan. The streets were nondescriptly European, with soaring metal skyscrapers peering above the lovely, but lowly older buildings. The city seemed dirty, unkempt, and not at all inviting. It seemed generic. Nothing about it proclaimed "this is Milan". Instead, it vaguely asserted something along the lines of "Remember me, people visiting Rome and Florence and Venice? I'm here too". It had a kind of desperation, mixed with reluctant resignation to second-class status, at least in terms of beauty.
     Though the city may not be "bristling with the aesthetic impulse", there were some lovely moments. The parks I wandered into were beautiful, and some of the churches were photo-worthy, but very little else really caught my attention. I wasn't really surprised. Milan is not somewhere I ever really wanted to go, and had very few expectations about. The only thing that I'd heard was worth seeing was the Duomo, which I somehow managed not to see, and the stores, which I couldn't afford even if I was the kind of person to spend their vacation shopping. So with my low expectations, I was even a little pleasantly surprised by the places that did make me smile.
     I was not, however, pleasantly surprised enough to want to spend more than one day there. This may have been compounded by the fact that I was tired, hungry, and lonely. I do not do well travelling on my own. My natural reserve becomes full-blown timidity, and I find myself paralyzed. All my thoughts get stuck in my head without someone to share them with, and I start feeling overwhelmed by everything I'm thinking, feeling, and wanting to say out loud. Obviously, the degree to which this interferes with my enjoyment of a place differs on the location, but it was definitely a factor in Milan. The entire time I was walking around, I was counting down the hours until I could reasonably head back to the station to meet Abbie. When I finally did turn myself that direction, I realized I was immersed in the crowd of Saturday shoppers along what seemed to be one of the busiest shopping streets in Milan. I was not amused.
     Then finally, finally her train was pulling up to the platform, and even though I scanned the faces of everyone getting off the train, I was still surprised by her sudden appearance. We shared a massive hug, both of us grateful to see a face from home, a friend we knew so well we didn't have to try anymore. We just had to be. It was such a relief.
     Henry James, in his Italian Hours, a collection of essays about the time he spent in Italy, says this about Milan: "in it's general aspect still lingers a northern reserve which makes the place rather perhaps  the last of the prose capitals than the first of the poetic". I completely agree with him, although I don't fully understand where he's drawing the line between prosaic and poetical capitals. No one in their right mind could call Paris prosaic, so it can't be north to south. But that's not really the point. The point is that the city seemed like very little more than just a city. Some places call out to you, reach out their arms and drag you into them. Paris did that. So did London, and Prague, even, to some extent, Bratislava, once I realized what it really had to offer. Milan did not. Nothing about Milan attracted me to it or made me want to stay there. Abbie felt exactly the same way, so we were grateful our reservations kept us there for only one night.
     We found our hostel after zig-zagging back and forth along the same street for what seemed like forever because the directions from the hostel told us to orient ourselves using the entrance to the subway. There were four entrances to the subway, so that was not so helpful. But we did get there, and immediately collapsed into our beds, getting up only to pay. The next morning, we made it back to the train station, purchased unreasonably expensive train tickets to Florence, and were off on our Italian adventure.

02 March 2014

Prelude

     Florence, Verona, Venice. Those evocative names have floated through my brain as long as I can remember. Italy, that land of history, culture, romance, knowledge, art, empires, conquests, downfalls, and rebirths. It's one of those countries that needs to be on everyone's bucket list because, let's face it, so much of who we are as a culture, as a world, sprang from it's soil. What would Europe be like without the Roman Empire or the Medici's? Or art without Michelangelo or DaVinci? Or poetry without Dante? You can't not want to see where all that greatness came from. Also, it's really, incredibly beautiful.
     So when Abbie and I decided to take our joint Spring Break trip there, I was so excited. We planned out an itinerary: meeting up in Milan, then three days in Florence, two and a half in Padua, and one and half in Venice. This gave us time to see the cities themselves as well as take day trips, which we figured we'd decide on in the moment. And we went. And it was magical.
     I'm back in Bratislava now, in my own bed, surrounded by the purple walls I've started to call home, at least for now; and I'm so grateful. I miss Abbie. I miss the warmth which is not a part of the Slovak character. I miss not having to think about school. But as I emerged from the train station into the sunlight filtering through the concrete towers of Petrzalka, I let out a sigh of relief. It was wonderful to be on the road, to carry everything I needed on my back, but it was an exhausting trip, and I was ready to cook again. To unpack. To spend more time learning about the country I've chosen as my home this spring.
     Italy took the breath from my lungs, and my heart out of my chest. It surprised me, made me smile, awed me. At times I wanted to throw myself into the Tuscan countryside without a backward glace, to float along a river to the sea. I longed to eat nothing but pasta, pizza, and gelato. I felt like soaring in the clouds with the angels depicted in all those domes. I wanted to be a part of the daily life of the Duomo, to give the smallest part of myself to the stones. So much about Italy enchanted me.
     But Italy was challenging as well. She made me think; about preservation, about truth, and yes, about life. There were moments I wanted to shake her, to make her see what she has turned into. Other times, I wanted to bring the entire country into my embrace, in thanks, appreciation, and in comfort.
     Perhaps most importantly, Italy made me think. I learned so much about it's history, it's culture, it's modernity. And yes, I also learned more about myself. That is what travel is really for, in my opinion: to learn about the world and your place in it.
     And though I know it's impossible to share experiences with anyone else, I'm going to do my best to let you into my head and my shoes as I wandered around the Italian countryside with Abbie. I'll be posting updates as quickly as I can, with one post per city. But in the immortal words of Levar Burton, don't take my word for it. If any of what I say intrigues you, go! If you can't go, read books. Look at pictures. Search for your own answers. Find your inspiration, and chase after it with everything you have.
     Are you ready?