30.3.09

speedbumps on the highway to fluency

I am introducing a new and regular (ha!) column today... well probably just the idea of it right now since class starts in 10 minutes. It's called Speedbumps on the Highway to Fluency, and it looks at intricacies of the German language that, no matter how close I come to fluency, still trip me up regularly. The idea is, if I take the time to write about it and wonder why I keep getting it wrong, I'll figure it out and stop sucking.

The column is dedicated to the German word for speed bump: Geschwindigkeitsreduzierungshöcker.

29.3.09

new semester

The new semester begins tomorrow here in romantic Heidelberg. I am pumped, for a few reasons:
1- Warm weather. This perpetual grayness is about to take a hike, and I couldn't be happier to see it go.
2- New courses. I've diversified a bit this semester- as opposed to my slew of 5 literature seminars last semester, I'll be taking only two. In addition I'm attending 4 lectures on various topics both intellectually interesting and pertinent to current or future degrees. Here they are:

Seminars:
Dramen des 20. Jahrhunderts- 20th Century Drama
Expedition als literarisches Motiv- Travel/Journey as literary Motif

Lectures:
Die Europäische Union- The European Union- political science lecture
Diktaturen des 20. Jahrhunderts- Dictators of the 20th Century- history lecture featuring Soviets, Nazis, Francos, and Latin American military dictators
Rechtsphilosophie- Philosophy of Law- law lecture
Einführung in die Neuere deutsche Literatur- Intro to Modern German Literature- literature lecture

I made some predictions at the beginning of last semester as to which courses I was looking most forward to- the Christa Wolf seminar came out on top. It was quite off- I found that seminar to be among the worst, and I enjoyed my Georg Büchner and Heinrich Heine courses the most. But I'll make another prediction, and knock on wood while doing it- I'm most looking forward to the Dictators lecture and the Travel-Novels seminar. We'll see.

And now to make my playlist for the walk tonight. Each semester I take a nice long walk the evening before courses start, to get a bit of perspective and clear my mind. Tonight it'll occur after an English language screening of Frost/Nixon. Excited.

I hope everyone is enjoying Spring blooming around the northern hemisphere.

Love al.

27.3.09

travel

Pictures from my trip can be found here.
I couldn't blog while traveling the last couple weeks- so I opted for the old fashioned journal and found it quite rewarding. I took my notebook with me practically everywhere during my trip and wrote whenever something stru
ck me. I'd also try and summarize a bit at the end of each day. Here is the vast majority of my travel journal, transcribed for your reading pleasure:

12.3.09
In Frankfurt Hahn Airport. Literally Arsch der Welt. Gary IN has got nothing on the place. No train service here, must take bus--> only runs every 4 hrs, so I am here 4 hours early. Ugh. But my bag was only 8.5 kg, so I get to carry it on. I'll be in Rome late tonight. Depending if I'm tired I may go for a walk and find a bar. We'll see. Yesterday a 17 yr old killed 16 people at his former school outside Stuttgart. Life is way too precious. People need to recognize that beauty, or even the possibility of it, is worth living for, in all its forms.
13.3.09- Rome.
-Piazza della Repubblicca
-Monumento a Vittoria Emmanuella
-Castel St Angelo
-Vatican
-Palazzo Chiggi
-Trevi Fountain
-Quirinale
-Prego, Ciao!
-Italians drive mopeds or smarts. No bikes.
-Language of tourism is English.
-Traveling alone- strange, but could get used to it? Heidelberg tourists< style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 320px; height: 240px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh2lz5oGvQmIvVhpgxBH4P5CukNrbVp6iuC-3n0kFT46MAoXxGRrIMcAAIkdsF0hvJYXnJaXOu16cg8m-YeNuQ1szbVktcIJEpozbuYuZiBQgN6gXnn1GH76FRaQGldQqHaR3IhuxO28Bw/s320/DSCN0854.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5318001028329809330" border="0">The gardens of the Palatinate are paradise- Roman dreams. Sun and shade are mixed with birds and flowers, ancient stones coexist with just-bloomed dandelions. My feet are free and open for the first time in months. A garden cannot be ruins- it follows different rules than stone or wood. It's alive--> it cannot die. It's reborn each spring.
-
15.3.09
Hopefully going to hear the Pope speak today- I think so, as the crowds continue to grow here in St Peters Sq. The morning couldnt have been much better- showered and out by 8:30, breakfast, then a 1hr walk to the Vatican. I wore a collared shirt for the occasion.
Finished 1984 yesterday, but wish I hadn't- now I have only Siddartha left, and it's short. May re-read.
I bought a man-purse yesterday. Karma immediately punished me, as the lady gave me the smaller size so nothin fits. But I make it work. Oh well, I learned my lesson.
Do people get home from vacations and watch the entire video they've filmed? I can't imagine re-watching my panorama scene of St. peters. Maybe I'd rewatch my kid hiccup.
When did the narrator write 1984? He had to have lived outside of the society. Time/geographical distance?

Christus Vincit
Christus Regnat
Christus Imperat
Christus Abomnimalo
Plebem Suam Defendat
religion of love? certainly not that of humility.

-
no TV, no computer, no internet, no music, no phone, no companion- books have become my partners, by eating sleeping and walking.

[From Darwin exhibit in Rome]
"It is interesting to contemplate an entangled bank, clothed with many plants of many kinds, with birds singing in the bushes, with various insects flitting about, and with worms crawling through the damp earth, and to reflect that these elaborately constructed forms... have all been produced by laws acting around us. There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having originally been developed into a few forms or into one; and that whilst this planet has gone cucling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being, evolved." -C Darwin.
-
At a concert tonight in St. Ignatius Loyola in Roma. Beautiful church- sure to be a beautiful concert. Except for the fake dome that Bernini painted on. The illusion works from the back but from where I am sitting.
I miss Liz. More, I miss our relationship. Walking, holding hands. It'll be at least 14 months before that can regularly happen again. She's in India, I'm in Rome. We are growing as individuals, learning about ourselves and experiencing the world.
It's not that I can't wait.
16.3.09
Rome is... impressive. 5000 years of history jammed into 9 square miles... every corner reveals another suprise, another invitation to discovery. I was in the Vatican museums today- impressive, what the popes have managed to steal over the years. Again, impressive. The Sistine Chapel, as touristy as it is, was amazing. Adams hand stretched out to God- very sympathetic, very almost humble... A sort of weakness and dependance. An awareness of imperfection.

And St Peters, well, as Thorsten has said, the Dom makes him believe there is a God, or something- St Peters has a similar effect. it is immense, grandiose- a fitting center of Catholicism. I feel that the time, money, and creativity poured into its creation and maintenance could be put to better usage, but the beauty of it mystifies me and I feel that I must somehow justify it.
I have eaten nothing but pizza in Italy. Also fitting.
Looking forward to spring in Heidelberg. Playing music outside, hiking, reading. It will be low pressure and nice.
I leave tomorrow for Greece- excited! A completely different culture. Excitied for Souvlaki.
Ciao Roma!
Yahsas Greece.
18.3.09 ("I'm so tired of being alone")
Didn't write yesterday- was a bit shook up.
First impressions- rain! Ugh. 5 straight glorious days in Roma and then the heavens open up. Hopefully I'll get at least one clear sunset in Santorini.
Also, wild dogs, everywhere. No collars- they roam the streets, peeing everywhere in and out of stores- but they seem to know which lines they can't cross- they survive somehow.
But yesterday my brashness of doing this trip completely alone finally caught up to me. I went out for a walk after I'd checked into the hostel. It was about 4:30 pm, rainy, getting darker but really just cloudy. I headed out with the goal of finding my hostel for the weekend (after my jaunt to the islands). It's in the historic Plaka district, probably no more than 20 minutes from my current hostel. I found a souvlaki place that seemed nice- paused for a few minutes to look over the menu as a potential dinner spot that evening. I knew I could do it because they had a separate English menu. As expected, I've found Athens a bit more English and foreigner friendly, if and only superficially if because of the Greek alphabet. If you don't know Greek you cant do anything with the script, and so the script mus be translated into the Latin alphabet if they want anyone non-Greek to read things in the establishment. But so I lodged that in my initerary and moved on.
After maybe 20 steps a man walked up to me and asked me the time, in Greek. I gave the universal confused look and he smiled and in broken English asked me again. He struck up a conversation with me, inquiring as to where I'm from, how long I am in in Athens, etc. I told him i was looking for Plaka and he said the bar he works at is in Plaka, and he'd be happy to lead me there and offer me a shot of Ouza (the Greek national liquor) to start off my adventures. Now, at this moment my instincts were pure and unweary. This, I thought, is just an example of the famed Greek hospitality, of which I read multiple times in multiple guidebooks, how it'd be impossible during any stay in Greece to avoid a friendly interaction with locals. A bit prompt, I noticed, but nonetheless it was to be expected and enjoyed as a genuine cultural experience with local Athenians. He told me about himself- 4 kids, one divorce, a new wife, two jobs. He was very open, kind, almost eager to share with me his intimate details.
After ten minutes winding through the narrow crooked dark streets of Athens we made it to his bar. "New York Bar" it was called, I think. It was small- one oval bar with stools and room next to the windows for just two tables. It was claustrophobic, smoky, dim. There were very few people- one bartender, my new friend, and one customer, if I recall correctly. He sat me down at the unoccupied table and asked the bartender for an ouzo with orange juice for me. He went to the bathroom to dry off, so I waited to drink until he returned.
A few minutes passed without his arrival. A woman, the customer I'd noticed before, sat down next to me. She asked me if I mind if she joins me, in English. I said of course not! I was happy to be meeting people, even if she was not Greek (British) it was good to talk and she didn't seem to care if I wanted her to join me or not. She stank of liquor- everything about her seemed to swim in gin or ouzo. She reminded me, due to both her accent and mannerisms, of the great Cap'n Jack Sparrow- yet less made up and far less photogenic. She told me she worked at the bar- it showed, as she kept up a snappy Greek rapport with the bartender and another male patron. I eventually realized my friend was coming back.
The woman spoke quickly and slurredly, asking me questions and smalltalking to a shocking degree. As I sipped my drink she'd gulp hers, a "cocktail" she called it, and after each one she'd ask if she could have another. Why not? After all, she worked there. I was under the assumption I was drinking on the house as well, thanks to the famed Greek hospitality. In the span of my 1 drink, about 20 minutes, she'd had 5- she would gulp, reach down and pour from a bottle by her side. She asked multiple times if I'd like another, but I was uninterested- I really was itching to get going and see some ancient Athenian shit.
And so I finished my drink and she snapped her fingers for the check. The large man with whom she'd been intermittently speaking waddled over to the table with a piece of paper, placed it on the table, and said "135 euro."
-
What?
135 Euro. You pay she drinks.
I had one drink.
No. One is 10 Euro. She 5, is 125 Euro.
Um, I'm not paying for her drinks.
You say yes she can drink! You say yes!
Yes, because she works here... Of course she could!
(Lady) I don't do this cuz its fun, honey! Give him the money!
I don't have that much money. I'm just a student. There's my 10 Euro for my drink.
-
The man gave me a menu- it seemed that there was one extra 0 everywhere I looked. All the drinks were between 10 and 20 Euro. He flipped to another section- "Lady's drinks"- here they were all over 25Euro. I didn't know what to do.
-
Listen, sir, I never said I'd buy her drinks. And I definitely will not.
You said you buy! You said yes! Give me 50 Euro.
No! I payed for my drink, I'm leaving.
How much you have? You give me 50 Euro.
I am not giving you anything. I paid for my drink, I'm leaving.
-
He grabbed my arm and I pushed him away. I'm nervous, but somehow feel in control. They had nothing on me- I had absolutely not agreed to her services, and they were attempting to strong arm me. I made my way for the door.
-
You gay? If you say you gay, then you can leave.
I'm gay!
(Laughter)
-
And I bolted. I ran for a while through the rain, confused and a bit lost. I found a main square and stopped to make sure I had everything with me. I was soaked, scared. I found my way back to the hostel, talking to myself the whole way back, explaining what had just happened. Once inside the lobby I ordered an espresso and quickly gulped it down. I found a fellow traveler from Holland and spilled the entire story, as it was practically leaping out of me. He nodded in understanding and related a similar story from his travels in Havana Cuba. My nerves wouldn't settle all night. I didn't eat; I really had no appetite. I took a long hot shower and read in bed until tired enough to drift into a restless sleep.
-That was my first impression of Athens. Let's hope my weekend there is better.
Now to the Islands!
-
Santorini is... idyllic. It is so quiet, but only because it is low season. From my hotel it is a 30 minute walk to the main town- the view is, as advertised, majestic. The cliffs are sheer- quiet but quite loudly warning of the danger of one false step. I think I've come during construction season- the cooler months before the swarm descends post-Easter.
The northern town of Oia brags to be the best place to see the sunset because it is unobstructed by the other islands in the group- that may hold true in the summer when the sun sets due west. Now it falls ~ 15 degrees S of W, and Oia's view may be poor (all relative!). It may be perfect where I am now.
[an amatuerish diagram follows here of Santorini, with a compass and the two locations estimated.]It was nice.
I am afraid the swimsuit was a bit wishful.
19.3.09
This is the most beautiful place in the world that I have seen. I do not say that lightly. This is pure natural beauty. The result of a massive, catastrophic volcanic explosion 4000 years ago. Mittenwald Germany is 2nd.
-
Oia- This place is completely empty. A ghost town. I hear it is crazy in the summer- at a rate of 10 proposals per hour, at least. And after 10 pm the calories expended making love on this island could power Chicago for a week. I think I'd hate it in the summer, but now it is perfect. I went to a wonderful little bookstore and sple with German with the very nice girl- she gets to live here 6 months out of the year and sell books. She says she loves it these days but summer can be unbearable- hot and full. She complimented my Deutsch.
They are repainting the white walls white. Sinn?
Gyros are fantastic! Way better than döner. They throw french fries on top. It's tasty.
I am watching this sunset tonight from the westernmost tip of Oia- and I'll be honest, it's breathtaking. Better than yesterday... almost no clouds. But I'm afraid that I burnt today.
But its louder here. Lots of Americans, saying things for the sake of making noise. Inner peace can only be found through silence and oneness. Turn off everything except the ability to absorb, to experience.
Crazy loud here... how can you not be awed to silence? Out of respect.
Moments like this are why I may prefer deafness to blindness. Although I do believe beauty, pure beauty, can exist through any medium as well as in any mixture of mediums.
This human experience is wild. I am one. It's a constant and relentless struggle between the ethereal, the beautiful, the asthetic, that we consciously possess, and the base, instinctive, us as descendants of monkeys. How can I want a beautiful woman and want beauty in its theoretical sense at the same time?
Find the beauty. Trust that it is there.
Where did all these people eat this afternoon?
We've been lucky to evolve on a planet as beautiful as this. We better not fk it up.
Beautiful! Good job, curvature of the earth.
Home finally. But this new red face of mine may take some getting used to.
20.3.09
to Athens today. I'll most likely get to the hostel ~ 5pm, so I'll read, find dinner, and call it a night. No wandering anymore.
I made two attempts this morning to reach the ocean on the east side of the island- to no avail. Head east from the caldera (volcano rim) and it becomes poorer and more destitute- I tried following the donkey/mule paths to the coast but couldnt. A truck passed me on the road- the driver was shouting things into a mounted loudspeaker, but it was Greek to me. As he passed I smelled something foul- the back was full of tightly caged chickens. Poor guys. I ate an egg for breakfast.
The sunrise was nice this morning, but cold. The best part was the sound- refuting, or at least challenging, my theory of last night. Maybe deaf at night and blind in the morning. Rather neither.
I am outside writing and the wonderful owner here just brought me some chilled Santorinian wine, just to make me more comfortable. They did this when I arrived as well, and last night when I got home late the lady knocked on my door and offered me dinner! She put it on my table then turned my heater on. These people are genuinely kind. But living and working here can't be too bad. It's beauty is beyond description, and down time means sitting in the sun and having a cigarette. Not bad.
The flight will be nice today- probably quiet and no clouds.
A fly in my wine. Sir, what's a fly doing in my wine?
The backstroke! (love you dad!)
-----

The journal ends there. I didn't write much in Athens- but I had a wonderful time. I met a bunch of fellow lone traveleres at the hostel (Athens Backpackers- highly recommended). We explored the city together- highlights were obviously the Acropolis, plus the National Archaelogical Museum (masterpiece after treasure after priceless artifact) and Mount Lycavittos, a massive hill overlooking all of sprawling Athens. A massive city, a center of Western civilization and democracy.

Again, for more pictures visit the flickr site linked above.

School starts again Monday, so I'm getting organized. Very, very excited for Summer Semester in romantic Heidelberg.

Hope all is well everywhere. Love,
Al

20.3.09

SBMN website, Rome/Athens/Santorini

Hello!

This'll be quick because internet costs wayyyy to much at this hostel, but:

I've been to Rome and Santorini so far and both have been wonderful. Rome is dauntingly full of history and Santorini is without a doubt the most beautiful place I've seen in my life. I don't say that lightly, either. Mittenwald Germany is second place.

Now two days seeing ancient things in Athens, and then one week break in Heidelberg, then school! (what?)

Also, visit this blog. Sam wants to become a comedian in Los Angeles or something and got mad at me because I referenced something he didn't create on his own and didn't give linkage to his site. So there it is- please visit it very often and inflate his numbers because his ego needs a boost.

Love,
Al

12.3.09

jetsetting

Hello!

I haven't been able to post for a while because of my (surprise!) trip to Chicago last week. Lukas was in the musical Beauty and the Beast as Lumiere and my parents decided I had to see it. Follow the links here for a short clip. He was fantastic. I am quite proud of him.
Being in Chicago was strange, to be sure. I was there as a visitor, which hasn't ever happened before. I was able to see everyone though: Phil came for the weekend to see the show, Dom was around for a bit, I hopped down to Hyde Park for Smug Bastard Movie Night, and went bowling for Sam's birthday. I met the dog- he likes me. Samantha drew upwards of 15 pictures for the blank wall in my bedroom. Hannah cried when she saw me. And I got to hang out with my Mom and Dad. We were all together for a short time on Friday, and I could see how proud my parents were to have everyone there. Family is important.
I also got to eat everything I'd missed, I think: Ribs, Chipotle, deep dish pizza, Johnnie's. Not a bad week.

But now the real journey begins: I leave tonight for Rome! I'll be there (and in the Vatican) until Tuesday next week. Then I fly to Athens, and the next day to Santorini, an island in the southern Aegean. Then after two days there back to Athens to tour that city, and then back. Whew! There'll be lots of walking, lots of reading in cafes, lots of writing about my experiences. I'll post when I get the chance. Also pictures.

So until then, take care and let's go Spring!

Love al.