Saturday, November 28, 2009

wade in the wake of it.

Now there is no way I am supposed to be in this train car. When the man checking tickets smirked winked and a punched a whole in my ticket I chocked it up to Italian gusto but as Im offered complimentary champagne I much better understand his message. On a strange whim I wore a black dress to travel in, and now as the Dolce and Gabana bags pass my seat I'm happy with my decision. I can’t help but feel that this train is taking me home, there’s a certain warmth that was uniquely Italian that is replaced with arrogance in the city of Geneva. I hadn’t noticed its absence until I was reminded by kind this slight of hand. Maybe its my grandfathers botched Italian slang that makes me particularly fond of this country, who knows. As I switched trains in Milan Beethovens Fifth was playing and I couldn’t help but smile. Brian will be waiting for me at the train station, and I look forward to spending my last day in Utopia with a new friend from Geneva. He is a small guy who dresses clean and would always bounce into my room to share chocolate or chat about the silly happenings of the day. His air of fabulous follows him and I will gladly wade in the wake of it. I have that itching yet again to leave my cares packed in my bags and let the beauty of Rome engulf me. Now there’s plenty to worry myself with but they are not going anywhere fast and will surly be waiting for me upon my arrival home. Its as if the wind nudged me into this first class seat to remind me to enjoy myself. Grazie.

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Time: please ignore my ramblings

Just before I left, Belinda in the elegant manor of older sister fought my dragon sized fears that tied my stomach into knots with her calm and steady sentence structure. "Think of the friends you have now, at one time you didn't know them at all. Now they are the people your closest with." It made perfect sense. "Only in theory" I convinced myself. Surly the practice would be a much more complicated predicament filled with forced smiles and those awkward "stop and chat" conversations I have grown to despise. She was right though and it turned out to be one of those things that 4 extra years on a planet will teach you. Her voice solid with the confidence she knew I needed chimes in when I think about the people I was nervous even be around but now feel almost as comfortable as home. Now in any normal situation three months would seem miniscule to even get to know someone but this is a unique version of friendship, one from concentrate. As quickly as my three months here has passed when I think back at what has happened time contorts and a year may have passed for all I know. The pictures show proof and explain the timeline but that doesn't stop me from wondering who the girl looking out for the very top of St. Peters Basilica is, surly not I. It's silly almost that I came all the way to Europe to make friends with people who live a state below me, not to mention Caitlin who lives in East Lansing for Christ sake. Life is just funny that way I suppose. Coming home and leaving these people swirls a hurricane of mixed emotion. It will never be like this anymore, never in my life will this odd group of characters come tromping down the steps, into the creepy community kitchen, tired from work but with enough light left to keep company with friends. Good friends too, ones that know strangely too much about you for someone who was a stranger in August. Its not that I want to stay in the half way house deemed "Circ de Cenacle" for the fellow freak shows who reside in it, I just want to press pause for a while. The movie is in fast forward, it has been since I left for Chicago. Maybe for aday or two slow motion could kick in. I have this gross feeling that it’s all this way really, I mean where has college gone. Poof. Do I have any other options but to keep letting this river tow me away? Should I be afraid? If so of what? Life? Now wouldn't that be a waste. My ramblings get the best of me but have been cluttering behind my eyes and make falling asleep at night next to impossible.I wonder what Bea would say to soothe my current state.

Monday, November 9, 2009

full circle I suppose.

"...If there is a load, that you have to bear, that you can't carry...." There soft toned rendition of Lean on me helped calm the rolling waves of motion sickness during our nauseating bus ride to Annecy, France. The low thick fog and autumn covered mountains (that I'm sure were beautiful) were lost while I stared at the floor, listened to my friends adorable singing voices, and tried my to hold down breakfast. The remainder of the day I promise you was exceptionally more charming. Chris bought me a San Pellegrino and with a pat on the back we headed to the cobblestone streets that intermingle with canals. We traipse around the misty air and sample cheeses from the Sunday market stands we pass. When you see buildings with ages you can hardly fathom, imagining who else has walked these same paths left me with an emotion that lies somewhere between eerie and excited. The whole city had that same tone and the thick ever present fog only added to the appeal. I went to my first castle where we joked of our plans for buying it. "It's nice and all but we'll have to work on insulation." Chris tells me. "Of course " I assure him "but theirs so much square footing, and I think the piano would look splendid over there." I posed as queen for an afternoon and at lunch I ate like a princess. A chevre cheese crepe and fresh spring salad lunch with a dessert crepe of homemade Carmel and fresh whip cream erased any hint of nausea and deepened my respect for the french and their attention to detail. The sprinkling rain curled my hair as we continued on our promenade. Activities like stopping for Mulled orange wine and crossing the Bridge of Love add to the ambiance of this fairy tale town. As we walked to the old prison that is now displayed as a museum I imagined the prisoners in the 1300's making this same walk, many of which I learned would be their last view of the world not threw iron bars. Within this island of a building the eerie out weighed the excitement, and while laying on the old prisoners beds was entertaining it left a residue on my back of misery that lingered longer than I hoped. The sun set put a nip to the air that directed us into a tiny restaurant run by a women who couldn't of looked more french. Her sharp noes and wild hair gave us a guided tour of her menu accentuating her local and homemade products with pride and integrity. She offers us free aperitifs since " Young students have little money", boy is she right. She was the kind of person who's expressions made the room glow like the candles lit on our table. As any wise traveller does we all tried her house favorites and local cuisines which I think nearly made her night. I can say that the bus ride home was far more pleasant but questions of the future did churn in my stomach. Soon I will be..umm...hmm... what is the end of that sentence, if I knew it maybe I could of rested at ease at the end of my prefect day. "Just stay here in the tower of your castle Heidi, ride bike your over cobblestone tiny streets with a baguette stuck in the basket." my imagination begs. Reality trails quickly behind laughing a sarcastic grumble and reminds me of the loans that are due, the jobs to be had, and the grad schools are to be applied for. With only 3 weeks left my fairy tale is fading away like a dream you wake up from and try to force yourself back into. You were just there, practically held it in your hands and in a counter intuitive pattern your diamond turned to coal and that coal into ash. If you look away for only a moment it promises to all blow away. This time around, where home is the unfamiliar territory, I recognize this feeling as the same one I had on a bus in Rome. Full circle I suppose. This time I carry a powerful bag of ammo acquired over the last few months, just in time for my next big gig. Now facing this change my only fear is that life will stop handing out such interesting mountains to climb. It promised it would as long as I try my hardest not to throw up on the ride there. With the soft support of friendship and all of the strength I can summon, it's a promise I can keep.

Sunday, November 1, 2009

Carpooling Zombies?

To me Halloween is a rare chance to be someone else, to play a role that on any normal day would seem impossible. Saturday presented itself as the perfect opportunity for just that. Having to work on arguably the best holiday, in a country that doesn't celebrate it, seems like as a complete and utter bust but I suppose I have acquired talents for making the best out of mediocre situations. Bright and early that morning I learned I would be the rapporteur for the NGO statement drafting to be presented at the UN Economic Commission of Europe Monday morning. That's jargon for the person who collects, organizes and writes the statement for the NGO group to present to governments (who will probably be daydreaming,) but either way its my words there not listening to and I like that. About ten women each from their own organization with their own priorities barked ideas at me that they felt necessary to present. Thankful for four years of lecture note taking and my keyboarding class in middle school I listened and tried to make sense out of there ramblings that they were expecting a document to come out of. What is more terrifying than any ghost or goblin was the expectations that were now placed on my shoulders, the stress rolled in the form of heartburn that ravished the back of my throat. It was this person who debated the necessary importance of policy implementation with seasoned feminists that I hardly recognised as myself. I was told I spoke like I was french by two women from France ( still not sure what that means) and also told happy Halloween from a women from Northern Ireland all in the same sitting. All of them looking to me, or a more professional, smart, elegant version of me for results which I sure enough produced, printed and distributed all before lunch. This life within the NGO world has become my norm, it feels permanent and comfortable making my life prior to this seem more and more like unfamiliar territory. But quickly enough I rush home and put on a much different mask, the lighthearted silly girl I present to my peers. Leaving all concerns of gender inequalities at the door. This girl listens to the monster mash while she draws on whiskers for her mouse costume in preparation for the cat and mouse duo that will bring mayhem to the streets of Geneva. Is the same person who drafted a UN resolution now dancing at a disco-tech with Napoleon Bonaparte? I suppose so although I hardly recognise either of them. I expected the holidays, like my birthday to be lacking in this strange city. But the girl who awkwardly turned 22 here two months ago now forgets sometimes that shes even in Switzerland, to wrapped up in the beauty of it all I suppose. Last night I saw a group of Zombies staggering down the street while we waited for the tram to take us home. They moaned with there arms out and they filed into cars and drove away. Carpooling zombies? I thought to myself, this strange yet uniquely Swiss event reminded me of what a time I'm having here in Geneva.