January 2009
It's been the whole year since I traveled last. I was dreaming about going to Netherlands, Switzerland and Belgium, but my dreams haven't had a chance to come true, yet, and it makes my longing for traveling even more intense. The only thing I came up with to make it easier for me to get through this gloomy time of my involuntary stationary is to travel to places I have already been to before. Places, like say, Fira- a small town on a Greek island of Santorini. I enjoy coming back to this place over and over again for it is made of warm breeze, golden sunshine and sparkling blue sea.
As soon as my plane lands in an airport in Athens, I know that this trip is going to be different from any trip I have taken before. When I finally get to my hotel near Fira, a city on the island of Santorini, seven hours later, I am sure that this trip is going to be far beyond being just different.
On our second day here my co-travelers and I decide to go out for dinner to a restaurant, located up on the top of a hill and overlooking the city. It is well known for stunning views over the island and outstanding cuisine. As I am climbing up cobblestone steps, leading to the upper part of the city, where restaurant is, a fairytale back from my childhood, which, I am sure, is familiar to you, too, comes to mind. It’s all about a brave, young and handsome knight, who has to confront a number of dreadful challenges in order to get to his beloved princess, who is locked up in a room up on the top of a tower. This is exactly how I feel like, stopping at another landing, catching my breath for a minute and looking at all those steps a head of me, which I have to climb, yet.
As I walk, I think about all of those events my day was made of: burning under a bright sun, getting stuck on a bus with no air-conditioning; looking at ruins in a building, which was pretty much a ruin itself. All of those were an adventures all by themselves, and, maybe for this same reason, a fact that I have to share a narrow and steep path with a herd of donkeys right now, doesn’t concern me as much as I would anticipated. I see it, rather, as an additional bonus, another memory I will put in a jar called “Santorini” and seal it for time being to open it and to be taken by memories of it, later. As I press myself into a wall to let another donkey pass, I look down at the city. There are hundreds of lights vibrating in the sea of darkness coming from beyond. I feel its vivid energy, let it in and keep on walking.
Finally, after a good half an hour “promenade”, tired and hungry, we get to the restaurant. At this point, we don’t care that much of a view as of some cold water and something to sit on. These desires get easily satisfied, and, as I get myself comfortable at a table on an open terrace, I look around.
Down below, I see Fira’s blinking lights, narrow streets, white houses under blue roofs nested, as it seems, right on the rocks. On my right, a black silhouette of a volcano-island, coming out of the dark sea, stands out against an orange sunset sky. Sound of waves, slowly breaking onto warm sand, blends with sound of this city made of music, world languages, laughs and donkey’s bleating (local feature!). Fira, what an amazing place it is, in deed. A tiny island, lost in an endless sea. Here, life follows according to its own rules, which seem to be so bazaar to outsides like we. Here, people know how to enjoy life’s little big things such as sunlight, warm sand and each other.
It happens, that whenever I think of Fira, a thought of a woman comes to mind for I award it qualities, which belong to a woman rather than to a place. A woman, whose name is Fira, lives two different lives: one of a day and another one of a night. During a day, she is relaxed, slow and casual. She spends half of it walking around her house half-dressed; smiles to something only she knows of; she looks around with her eyes, under heavy eyelids with long, thick eyelashes, half-closed. She lets her bare body to soak up sunshine and warmth. She is confident in her beauty, self-absorbed and lusty. At night, she puts on make up, sparkling clothes and hi-heels. She gives away smiles and warmth she soaked up during her lazy day. She laughs loudly and draws everyone’s attention to herself. She is sensual and seductive in every singe move she makes. She shines at night and her vibrant energy sweeps ones she passes by off their feet.
This is how I feel about this place, which is made of people who spend their days leisurely and nights passionately; people, who seem not to be able to exist by themselves, for I haven’t seen a person walking around all alone (that would be, except me). Wherever I look, there are people kissing, hugging, and walking around holding hands. I feel very much like a “white crow” in my voluntary state of independence, though I never feel lonely or longing for someone. I am here with my classmates, people whom I feel very comfortable with for it’s as easy to join them at any time as to walk away and spend a whole day on my own. I am free to do whatever I please around them and I am very thankful for it. I look at them now. I love them. I love their smiles, silly jokes, their silence, too. I feel so close to every one of them, even a few I met just a few days ago, at the beginning of this trip.
I look up in the sky, which is getting darker with every minute. In less than an hour, everything around here will be covered with a black and fuzzy blanket of night and this small Greek town will be the only light of life in this endless ocean of darkness. I love this night and I love this island and I don’t want it to end. Ever.
I decide not to set my alarm and rather sleep in the next morning. I sleep with windows open and blinds shut, but some how, my old friend, a playful sunbeam gets into my room. It climbs on my bed, runs to my pillow and jumps all over my face. Finally, it gets my attention and I open my sleepy eyes. “Hi, sleepy head! It’s me! Get up and shine!” I snooze for few more minutes, stretch in my bed, take a quick shower and go out of my little bungalow. I am welcomed by fresh and salty air, bright sunshine and silence. I walk by an empty swimming pool, by a terrace, where lonely and sleepy looking waiter gets tables ready for breakfast, through deserted hall and out of the hotel. I walk a path, which runs parallel to a highway and within next fifteen minutes, time it takes me to get to the nearest 24-hour market to get stamps, there is not a single car to pass me.
I look at the buildings: windows are opened and blinds are closed. People who live in them are sweetly asleep, holding each other, in their beds, in white houses under blue roofs. They will sleep until the time when sun is high in the sky and stay up until the time when it will be drowning in the black and warm sea, to turn this small island into a bright source of light and fill the air with symphony of life.
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December 2008
Part I
What happens in Vienna…
Live it.
Have I ever anticipated it being so unbearably hot in Vienna? No. Most people dressed up in shorts and T-shirts, but I stand out of the crowd, that's for sure. Everything about me yells that I am a Russian tourist: hi-heels instead of a comfortable walking shoes; nice, but absolutely inappropriate for this weather blouse and skirt. I look too dressed up and way out of touch.
I am standing in a shade of Parliament Building. Water in the nearby fountain splashes and sparkles and, if I did not know better, I would think of it as a cool and soothing oasis in the midst of red-hot city, but I am here and I know that it will take a hundred of fountains like this one to make this place cool and comfortable.
What is this day going to be like? What is ahead of me? - I wonder. I will find out all of it in a right time. For now, I have to wait… just a few more minutes, for it’s not exactly 1 p.m. yet. Actually, I hardly believe that all of it is going to take place to begin with. So many times in my life, things were promised and sworn and never happened. So, I kind of expect that Christian is not going to show up and everything is going to be exactly the way it has always been: I am going to get upset and to get over it pretty soon because I got used to this kind of things happening with me all the time. It’s just that I have never before in my entire life, met a person who had such a glow of joy about her/himself. Nobody, except my mom, got it.
When Christian and I parted at the airport, I felt amazingly lightheaded, playful and joyful, like a kid who got to play with a new toy before Christmas and who knows that there are more presents under the tree waiting to be unwrapped the next day. Vienna is my Christmas morning and meeting Christian is only the first present opened. I am convinced that meeting this guy is the best start of my vacation possible. He was so enthusiastic about every little thing he did; so passionate about things we happened to talk about during the flight. He was irresistible and got everyone around him contaminated with joy. In just a few minutes, I felt as trustful, comfortable and confident about simply being myself around Christian as if I have known him for years; as if we have been childhood friends, then, actually, it was more like in a song: “We happened to get sits next to each other far above the clouds”.
Calm and friendly voice interrupts my path of thinking.
“Hi, have you been waiting long?”
As soon as I see Christian’s warm smile and open looks, my doubts, fears and hesitations disappear into the air. How is it possible that a person of “absolutely nothing special” looks can be so attractive? Oh, I am not sure of what is going on in your mind as you read it, but I assume that you are thinking that I have a crush on him. Right? Wrong! I don’t have a crush and I am not talking about physical attraction at all. Attraction I am talking about goes far beyond physical looks. It’s a charm of personality, some kind of charisma of this person’s soul, invisible for eyes, but so obvious for senses beyond the five we know of. It’s like a glow of something very positive and pure, something so bright and powerful that it sweeps me over my feet.
“No, I got here just a few minutes ago”.
We chat for a little while about my stay in Vienna, places I have been to during these couple of days and places I want to see.
“Are you still up to going to Vienna forest?”
Of course, I am up to it. I want to see for myself the place that inspired Strauss to write one of the most beautiful pieces of music known, place which name is so often heard of but so little explored.
“OK, we can go there, but first I have to drop off my bike at my place. It’s not far from here. So, how about doing that first, having a cup of coffee and going to Grinzing?”
I am a bit confused, but Christian explains to me that Grinzing is a place up in Vienna forest and it’s not exactly near by. One has either to take a train and a bus or to drive to get there.
“I don’t have a car at the moment because my friend borrowed it, but he is going to return it very soon and then we can go to Grinzing.”
Years passed since that hot day in Vienna, and I am still amazed at the fact that I did agree go to Christian’s place and ride with him to Grinzing, a place I have never heard of before. For you see, I am not a naïve and trusting person; I am careful about any kind of extravaganza and I know better of “don’t talk to strangers” rule thanks to growing up in a very difficult time in Russia; time, when believes if the whole nation were told to be wrong; time of mistrust and fear; time when honestly was considered a nickname for stupidity; time, when mentality of people changed from “one person is a friend and a brother to another, for we are all of a human race” to “one person is an enemy to another, for there is not enough “stuff” for all of us”. How, after years of living in fear and mistrust to the whole world beyond my own, did I have courage to open up my heart and mind to a stranger? I don’t know myself. Maybe, because I was far away from Russia, everything looked and felt as different as it was a different world, a different reality; here, I truly believed that nobody was going to hurt me, nobody lied and everyone was as honest and kind as they seemed to be. Maybe…
I follow Christian and as we get further away from the Parliament, we get into more residential, less crowded and quieter streets. I look around in awe as I walk. I am absolutely in love with the simple beauty of surrounding buildings. There is no fruity rococo and overwhelmingly sweet baroque. Everything here is about simple, straight lines, minimal décor, classical forms and neutral colors. I am so impressed with how clean and neat everything is. It seems like people who live here, do care about this place. It feels like there are human beings made out of flesh and blood behind all of it and not just names such as “Z.K.U.” and “C.O.O.P.”*, like it is in Russia. I say to myself: “ This is the place where I want to live.”
We walk into a small bakery at a corner and buy some pastries. These bakeries are unique thing about this city. I have traveled a lot around Europe and I found out that Vienna is as famous for its bakeries as Paris for its restaurants. It seems like there is a bakery at every corner downtown. They became a sort of start of every single day during my stay in Austria. Nights are warm here so I sleep with a window opened and at around 5.30 or 6 a.m., as cool morning air and sound of water truck gets into my room, a strong scent of freshly baked goodies rushes in as well, carefully waking me up and making me hungry. Going to a bakery, picking a pastry and treating myself to it, became an everyday innocent pleasure I didn’t resist to. Every time, I held a warm bag in my hands and breathed in teasing scent of apples and cinnamon, I was instantly cheered up, soothed and comforted for it reminded me of my home and family.
“I want to show you my office. I just got it not a long time ago.” Christian says with pride, opens a door and lets me in. First, it’s difficult to see because from a bright and sunny outside, I find myself in a dimly lit and cool interior. As my eyes get accustomed to light, I see a pretty specious and almost empty place. There are some posters on the walls, plants in pots, a statue and a computer desk with a chair next to it. Thick brick walls of this nineteenth century building don’t let the hit of a day get in, so the place is comfortably cool; three medium size windows don’t let much light in either, so the room is pleasantly dark; floors are of some kind of tile and I can not resist its apparent coolness and take my shoes off to let my feet relax (didn’t I mention hi-heels?) at its smooth and soothing surface.
“It’s very nice. What is going to be here?”
“It’s going to be my class-room. I got a lot of students and I haven’t gotten an appropriate place for them to come to. I mean, until now.”
I look around for few more minutes and we walk back outside, into the bright light, which seems even brighter, almost painful, now, after the dim interiors. We walk a bit further down the street until Christian stops and opens another door. We get in and walk up a spiral staircase, lit by the narrow windows on the right.
“OK, we are here.” He says and unlocks a door. I come into a small entryway and stop for I have no idea of how to behave in an Austrian home. Questions rush into my mind. Should I take off my shoes or leave them on? Is it OK to take a pick on the rooms? Should I offer my help to do …whatever?
“Go ahead and get yourself comfortable. And please, don’t take off your shoes, it’s not very clean here.” Thank you, Christian.
After a few minutes of looking around, I can finally see clearly what is going on around me. There is a window on my left, which provides enough light for the entry and the hall and overlooks a small courtyard, shrubs, flowerbeds, couple of round tables and some chairs, two while umbrellas. Christian explains to me that he is not allowed to use this outdoor area for it belongs to the people who live downstairs, so he has to limit his passion for gardening to the flowerpots, which I see sitting on a wide window sills and on the floor. Apartment isn’t big, but its layout is functional. There are two spacious rooms of the right and a kitchen further on the left. It’s a truly eclectic space. A very nice china cabinet is right next to an art-deco style table, which is neighbored by a very simple, cottage style, sofa and an Indian looking rug underneath. Old wallpaper makes place look dated and it yells for a “face-lift”; beautiful hardwood floors in the living rooms and Spanish tile in the entry, halls and the kitchen gives it a rustic look. Furniture in the kitchen dates back to the 60ss and it reminds me of the furniture in my great parents apartment in Saint Petersburg and I instantly like it.
I follow Christian to one of the living rooms. It’s a nice size room with a fireplace, high ceiling and two huge windows, overlooking building across the street. Windows are wide open, so space is filled up with light and warmth. On the walls, oil paintings neighbors glamorous posters of the 30ss. I am surprised at the fact of how much such collaboration of styles appeals to me, for all those things don’t clash, but rather complement one another. I love this apartment. I feel here right at home.
Coffee is ready and Christian and I sit down at a round table in the middle of the room and enjoy pastries and a drink, warmth and silence. It’s so easy to just sit still and appreciate all these things I see around. I am bathed in the golden light and comfort. There is nothing I am worried about. I am very thankful for all these wonderful things and experiences unfolding in front of me. For the first time in years, I don’t feel guilty for being so selfishly happy; I am not afraid of all of this disappearing in an instance; I am not feeling unworthy of it or undeserving this magnificent bliss of joy. I am very much at peace with my own state of being.
A phone ring brings me back to the reality.
“It’s my friend. He is here. Let’s go. We will drop him off at his work and go to Grinzing from where.”
We walk downstairs and outside, where a white “Opel” awaits us. Fifteen minutes later, we are on the way to Grinzing; place, where I discovered myself.
*“Z.K.U.” and “C.O.O.P.” are abbreviations which stand for maintaining facilities serving apartment buildings in Saint Petersburg.
Part I
… stays.
Christian was right. It does take a while to get here. It’s about 9.30 am; I left my hotel more than an hour ago and I am not quite there, yet.
Two days passed since Christian took me to Grinzing and for all this time there was not an hour I wasn’t thinking of it; there was nothing I could do to get it out of my head. Last night, it became obvious to me that I simply had to come back there. I wanted to see more of it and I wanted to do it alone.
Sipping on a cup of coffee at a breakfast table, I study a map to figure out how I can get to Vienna Forest. It seems to me that the best way is to take a metro to Heiligenstadt and a bus, which will take me straight to Grinzing, from there. It sounds like a good plan and I put it into action.
I am one of a few passengers on a bus, smoothly running up a winding road to Leopoldsberg, which I choose as a starting point of today’s adventure. From there, I will walk down to Grinzing to catch a bus to get back to Vienna.
On my first trip here, on the way to Gringzing, Christian told me about it and in my mind I pictured a nice but touristy place, with all proper attributes, such as souvenir stalls, big buses, bright colors of welcoming banners and crowded restaurants. I was pleasantly surprised to find out that I was wrong all alone and Grinzing was actually a small, quiet, tuned down village; restaurants weren’t busy and noisy, there were almost no tourists and I haven’t seen a single big bus.
Grinzing is a place of three colors: yellow, white and green. When it was built in nineteenth century, people of substantial income, who settled down here, took liking in yellow color for it was considered a color of nobility and prosperity. They ordered to paint their houses yellow with white as an accent color. Green is for grapevines because originally Grinzing was founded as village of wine makers. Even nowadays, there are houses with plots of land big enough to grow grapes and make their own wine. Here, restaurants serve young white wine, which is as local as it gets, coming very often from their own back yards. I learned that a pine branch at a restaurant’s door means that this place serves local wine, which I found very nice, in fact, for I had a chance to taste it when Christian and I stopped at a restaurant called “Weingut Reinprecht” for a late lunch.
I get out in Leopoldsberg and follow a number of tourists to an observation platform. Here, far above Vienna, is the best place to see the whole city down below. It’s only 10 am; it’s sunny and pleasant and I actually enjoy waiting in line to take a look in a telescope. Vienna seems to be right on the palm of my hand, as I look through it. I pin point Stephan’s Cathedral, domes of Museum of Fine Arts, I can even see bright red stripe and blue tower of the Waste Incineration Plant, an amazing building designed by Hundertwasser. I see as far as a blue band of New Danube Canal and a hi-rise building of the United Nations headquarters.
After I am done with the telescope, I hang around for a little while, take pictures of a small church with a tall pine tree in front of it and a monument devoted to an event happened long ago, which circumstances I never found out. I check my watch and see that it’s time to get going. I choose to walk one of secondary roads for there is less, if any, traffic.
I walk in a shade of trees, growing on both sides of this narrow, two-lane road. Green tops lean toward each other creating a canopy above me. It’s silent and the only sound I hear is birds twittering somewhere in the bushes. I see a path on my left, leading somewhere through the greens. I stop to check my map. The road I am on makes couple of loops before getting down to the village. I assume that the path on my left is a shortcut, which will take me to Grinzing, and I choose to follow it. As I walk, path gets less and less obvious until it finally disappears at all and I find my self at a border of a vineyard. It occurs to me that I am on someone’s property though there was no fence or any king of sing, warning me about trespassing. I have to make a decision about either to walk back to the place I came from or to cross this hundred yard stretch and get to outskirts of Grinzing down below. I am not a kind of person who turns back, so I keep following a path, which runs along the vineyard. It’s getting hot and I am getting tired. I see a clearing in between vines, a nice grassy spot in the shade of trees, where I sit down and look around.
Down below, I see Vienna. I cannot point out separate buildings, except Stephan’s Cathedral, which Gothic roofs are visible even from this far away, but there is something about this view that touches my very soul. It's framed with green leaves, it's bathed in sun light and haze, it's peaceful and silent and it's as fresh as a drink of an icy-cold water. There are miles in between what I see and me, but I believe I am one with it. Such thing as distance doesn't exist any more for I feel like a stretch of my hand will be enough to reach out and touch it; such matters as my body and body of this city as well as everything around me lost its meaning for we are parts of one magnificent life and there is no separation in between us.
I see clusters of grapes growing on the vines. These vines get strength from the same soil I walk on. These grapes are warmed up by the sun, which keeps me warm, too. I breathe air they breathe. When time is right and grapes are full of juice, they are going to be picked up and made into wine. Someone will drink it and with another sip, an idea, which will affect lives of thousands of people, including me, will come into this person’s mind. We are all connected in ways we don't know about. We are all one.
In this place, I recognize a very primal and simple connection in between everything in this world. I recognize that I am a part of it and I am as important to this whole as anybody else.
This view over Vienna is imbedded into my soul since this day in July. It’s not only that I see it now as clearly as I did back then, but that I feel today exactly the same way as I felt almost eight years ago, as well. Anytime, I can choose to be back to this vineyard; I can choose to be brought back to the very core of my being. Funny thing is, that I cannot figure out what this state of being, this moment, was made of. What was there that made it so special and powerful? I consider these few minutes the most important moment of my life. Moment, when my eyes, my mind, heart and soul was opened to something so much greater than anything I know of that I cannot even put a name to it.
When I got back to Russia, I happened to read a story by Somerset Maugham about a man who saved enough money to live life he wanted to for ten years; he decided, that as soon as he runs out of money and won't be able to afford to live the way he likes any more, he would commit suicide. When time came, he couldn't bring him self up to do what he intended to. So, he ended up with no money, no place to stay, and not even a desire to live. In some way, his spirit did die, but fear kept his body alive, and the old men kept on existing rather than living, for what is body without spirit, this spark of life within? And this existence was one of misery, sickness and begging until the day he died. I thought about this story a lot and I came up with a conclusion that it does appeal a lot to stay in a moment of pure happiness forever. This is exactly what the old men wanted to happen and I believe that he would succeed, if he didn’t miss the only chance he got; a chance to make a decision between life and death, between keep on living and face life challenges, or to die in a joyful state of being he has been experiencing for ten years. He didn’t choose either.
I was haunted by this idea of perfect death because I have never relived quite the same moment of pure happiness, love and peace since that day up there, in Grinzing, in between grape leaves and sky. There was nothing like it. Was it my moment to choose between life, not necessary all pink and joyful, so unpredictable, and peaceful and happy death? In this case, I missed my chance for “happily ever after”, too. If I died then, I would die as a very happy person, in deed, but I didn't die. Rather, I was born again; this time, with eyes wide open.
I know that there is a meaning to everything. I know that something changed up in Vienna forest. I know that I am still alive for a reason. I know, that life, even though it gets tough sometimes, is the greatest gift ever given.
Live it.
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Today is the day. It finally arrived. I have been looking forward it the whole year, since that warm and sunny day in September, when I was sitting at a dining table in my Southern California home talking about a TV series I watched years ago about Johann. This was then, when I heard for the first time of organ's ability to produce sounds so low that human ear can not recognize them as sounds. Since then, I was fascinated with an idea of hearing, no, rather, feeling sound not with my ears but rather with my bones.
I love music. I am a person who "loves with her ears". When I listen to music, I surrender to it. I put my mind to rest and let myself being led by the inner and quieter other me. It takes me to places that my mind cannot for imagination rules. I respond to music physically as well as emotionally; its rhythm sets the pace to my breathing and; it makes me laugh or puts me to tears. During these precious moments, I am truly free; there is no limits; no boundaries; no rules. I have no control over it. These are the moments of complete solitude, even if I am surrounded with people.
So, when I was told about this organ in Waalse cathedral in, I made a decision to go there and listen to its fascinating instrument. Idea got stuck in my head. I know what it feels like to listen to music with my ears, now I wanted to go further and listen to it with my bones and since I couldn't imagine how it would feel like, I wanted to experience it even more.
That is the reason of my excitement today. In a couple of hours, I will be at the cathedral at a concert of organ music!
It was another busy day, full of excitements and I am supposed to be exhausted to the point of feeling numb and this hour of relaxation is supposed to be… relaxing, but no way, I can lay still! I am too thrilled of the upcoming event to take it easy and relax. Instead, I am blathering and keep doing all these little things that make no sense at all. Finally, I give up and call it a day. I take cold shower, put make up on and dig out the other (I have two) nice dress I took especially for this occasion. Like a high school girl before a date, I spend more time than usual in front of the mirror and make sure that I look and feel my best.
Rather than taking a cab, I decide to take a metro and walk from the station to the cathedral. On a train, I look around at people: some are reading magazines and paperbacks; some stare in front; some just look tired and gloomy. It's an end of another busy day in the middle of a workweek and everybody wants to get home. Everybody, except me for I am going to experience something many of those people have never heard of. I close my eyes for a second and take a deep breath. I am swept over with a warm wave of light and goodness; I wish I could share these amazing feelings with everyone! I open my eyes and see my reflection in the mirror smiling back at me. I look around again and notice that many people stare at me and smile, too. I wonder if they heard my wish; if they actually felt whatever I was feeling at that moment.I get out on my station and go up the stairs to a busy pedestrian street. It's already getting dark and though sky is still blue, I can see stars appearing here and there. The heat of the day surrenders bit by bit to the chill of the night. I feel warmth of the evening breeze on my skin; it caresses me. I listen to the symphony of life around me: there is child's laugh; here comes clinging of the glasses; here is music playing at a restaurant nearby; a siren on a background, and all together it's beautiful.
I am approaching the grand silhouette of the old cathedral, which seems black against the fading blue sky. As I get closer to it, cathedral seems older and gloomier and even grander than before. I feel so small compare to it! I am able to see the old stonewalls, washed by thousands of rains and burned by sunlight for hundreds of years. I see it now and it's been here for centuries and it still be here for centuries to come after I am gone. In these walls, thousands of people prayed, pleaded, gave up dreams and got hopes; it saw joy and grief; death and reincarnation.
As I get inside, I am amazed with the sudden transformation. It feels like from a busy, loud and lightheaded XXI century, I was thrown a couple of hundred years back, to the place that it lit up by the candles, there people keep the heads and voices down; there saints stare at me from all over. In this flickering light, it seems like it will take them only another moment to come down from their pedestals.
I feel lost. My smiling face, my make up, my fancy dress, all of it seems completely out of place. Fortunately, my train of thought is stopped for the music begins. With the first deep sounds of the organ, all my senses except hearing die or rather all of them turn into hearing. I get numb. World around me turns into a flat image, it gets blurry and the only thing I see clearly is the bright source of light ahead of me. I feel my blood rushing in my veins and my heart beating at some crazy pace. I feel like I am falling into some kind of void and there is nothing there except this music and somehow the music turns into this void itself. Somewhere deep in side me, I feel a very deep and low vibration; it starts in one point and eventually, bit by bit, it sweeps my whole being over and goes beyond me and feels up the void I am in. Suddenly, everything turns silent, like there is nothing: no sounds, no smells, no taste, no colors and it stays like that for a few moments, until I am rushed back into my body, into reality for the music is over. As I applause, I feel tears running down my face. I am overwhelmed with joy and gratefulness for I experience far more than I ever anticipated and I know that this amazing silence was actually the sound I came here for; I felt it and I knew exactly the moment it was gone.
I walk out of the cathedral. While I was inside, night fell over the city and now it's dark. I stop and look up the sky and I think I know exactly what Van Gough meant. Starry, starry night.
[+/-] show/hide this post Daytrip Notes. Day Three.
Phone ring wakes me up at 5 in the morning.I open my eyes and look around a room. It’s unfamiliar to me. I am confused. Where am I? Oh. Amsterdam. I am in Amsterdam. I am on the trip I have been dreaming about for years!
“Poor guy downstairs”, I am talking to myself, “I can just imagine what he is thinking about this crazy Russian girl who wants a wake-up call at 5 am.”
Cool morning air, coming from an open window, freshens me up. Still sleepy I maneuver around furniture and squeeze into a doll-size bathroom. I take my quickest shower ever and at 5.45 am I am out of the hotel and down to the street.
I feel incredibly light headed, safe and alert at the same time. I see things in a way I have never seen them before and it feels like if all of my senses got awakened after being asleep for years. The day is just breaking and sky, with not a cloud upon it, is still dark and only down below, just above the rooftops, it’s turning pale blue. There is not a sound around. The city feels fresh and crisp, like if it was bathed in this morning light and silence and all the sorrows, frustration and misery was washed away. I breathe in this clearness and indulge this morning air. It lifts me up.
As I keep walking down the street, I realize that I am not aware of my body anymore. I don’t feel me legs stepping on the ground, I cannot tell if it’s cool or warm. I got beyond my physical form and now, I am one with everything that I see around me, I dissolve in this place. I look up at the rooftops and I see the street I am walking on down below; I feel roughness of roofing under my fingertips. I know that I am down here, but I also know that I am everywhere else.
I get to the Old Market Square and I stop at awe. Silence surrounds me like a blanket. It seems unbelievable that this quite and small square is the same place I visited just last night, all crowded with people, noise, lights. Now, it’s deserted. Almost, deserted. There are just a couple of sellers getting their slats ready for the morning crowd and a truck, watering the streets I walk to the middle of the square and stay there for a few minutes. I listen to this silence; I look up at this pale sky and gray silhouette of the houses surrounding the place, I feel moisture in the air and I smell it, too. As I walk around, I do my best not to make a noise as if being afraid of breaking a sort of magic spell. It seems like there is nobody else in the whole city and it all belongs to me.
It’s almost seven and I am in a hurry to get back to the hotel. Breakfast is served from 7.30 to 9.30 and I want to beat the crowd down at the dining hall. I am hungry, so my breakfast of coffee, croissant and cereal seems like the most delicious thing I ever tasted in my life. As soon as I am done, I pick up some things up in my room, go down to the garage to pick up my rental and drive out of the city. Actually, it’s the first time I rent a car while traveling and I am enjoying seeing everything at a different pace, not as a pedestrian, but as a driver. I drive by the canals and endless number of bridges, I wait for people to cross streets and I see motorcycles zooming by. I like all of that, but I am very happy to get out of the city before the morning rush hour begins.
Some time later, I am down to the countryside. I love country roads. No hustle, no “Honk, honk, you, idiot!”, nothing like that. Weather is nice so I put the top down. I drive by rolling hills, colorful fields, which always remind me of a quilt when I look down on them from a plane, and small villages, with all these tiny houses, flower window boxes and welcoming front porches. I am on my way to a castle. I adore castles (can you say “adore” about castles, actually? Never mind.). Last time I went to a castle, was three years ago, when my dad and I traveled to Check Republic. We visited number of castles back then and none resembled another in any way. It’s not only the castles that were unique, but the towns they were located near by, as well. These towns with their market squares, churches and pebble-stone paved streets, became my most precious memories.
I park and buy a ticket to get into the castle. I am lucky because it’s the last guided tour before the lunch break, over wise, I would have to hang around for a couple of hours; not like I would really mind that, just everything has been so perfect!
Couple of hours later, I am out of the dim light and medieval walls into the bright sun light. I am starving, so I look for a nice restaurant. I found one that I really like. I sit down in the shade of the grapevine leaves hanging down from a trellis and order a glass of wine and a special. I just sit there, enjoy the taste of young white wine and I feel like if time stopped and I am going to stay in this moment of happiness and ease forever. There is almost no people and I can hear bird singing and water running in a creek near by; I see sunbeam reflecting from wine in my glass and I feel it playing on my face; I see bread crumbles on the table. Isn’t this simplicity is what makes it so perfect?
At midnight, I think of that day. What a magnificent day it was! I am so thankful for it and for the next seven days ahead of me.
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