Sunday, March 2, 2014

Europe Trip, Part 3

February 2, 2014
Life in Trier has been relaxed and fairly mundane (but in a very good way). It was hard to say goodbye to Lindsay, but it definitely helped to know that we'd be seeing each other in Berlin in just a couple short weeks. I know that when we actually say goodbye to be a total mess. Not to mention when I have to leave Nick. I'm trying not to think too much about all that right now.

Nick's family is wonderful. They've all been so warm and welcoming. It's also been so fun and interesting to see Nick slip back into his role of son and brother. I'm getting to see all sorts of new sides to his personality.

Today, Nick took me around Trier to see the sights. We went to the big ampitheatre where the Roman gladiators used to fight, went to see the Dom (an ancient, very impressive church that houses the Tunic of Christ), one of the oldest Gothic cathedrals, the ruins of an old Roman bath, an old palace and park, and wandered through downtown, munching on doners and delicious gelato. It was a fabulous day, and we ended it with an amazing German dinner (sauerbraten) prepared by Nick's father.





February 3, 2014
(Side note: this entry was in preparation for going to Bruges. I've bolded the ones that I got to sample)
Recommendations for Belgian Beer
Trappist and Abby Ales (brewed by monks, at a monastery): Rochefort, La Trappe, Westvleteren (green cap=blonde, blue=8%, yellow=12%. VERY difficult to find)
Lambic/Geuze Beer (acidic, very traditional for the region): Oede Beersel, Frank Boon, Cantillon
Wheat Beer: Wittekerke, Vlaamsch Wit, Brugs Tarwebier, Waase Wolf
Blonde and Golden Ales: Duvel, Delirium Tremens, De Halve Maan
Red Beer: Roden Bach, Duchesse de Bourgogne, Echt Kriekenbier
Saisons or Seasonal Beers: Dupont
Brown Ales: Liefmans, Charles Quint
Belgian Ales: De Koninck, Duvel Moortgat
Stouts: Hurcule Stout, Stout Bie, De Dolle Extra Export Stout
Uncategorizable: De Dolle Browers, La Chouffe, Kwak

(Side note: for those interested, my favorites of these were all of the trappist ones, the Wittekerke, the Hurcule Stout, and Kwak. La Chouffe and De Halve Maan were also great, but I'm more of a fan of darker beers. Cantillon was definitely an acquired taste, but worth it to sample. The Dupont was my least favorite.)

Here's a preview of Bruges: Nick drinking Kwak. 
This beer is a must-try if you're ever in Belgium, not only because it's a delicious 
amber ale, but also because the serving glass is pretty awesome.



Saturday, March 1, 2014

Europe Trip, Part 2

January 26, 2014
We ended up spending less time in Potsdam proper than expected, as Nick's interview took quite a long time.

In the end, we left the Institute around 4 PM and made our way back into town. We were disinclined to go straight back to Berlin after having traveled all this way, so instead we took a quick bus to see the nearby castle, Sansoucii. The castle grounds were massive and nearly completely empty at that hour in the late afternoon. The sky darkened quickly, and soon we were wandering in the gloomy twilight, crunching along in the snow. It felt very quiet and lonely, but very beautiful as well.

As it got later, the freezing weather and our hunger drove us back to Berlin, where we feasted in the invitingly warm Tibetan restaurant near Nick's house.

The following day was spent leisurely: sleeping in and visiting the gym. The highlight of the day was going to the nearby paint-your-own ceramics shop for the third installment of my Christmas present. We chose a nested teapot to paint. Nick painted the cup while I painted the pot. On the cup, I added a small otter curled up at the bottom (my animal counterpart), and a slumbering black bear to the teapot (Nick's animal counterpart). We will each take our respective pieces when I leave, and we'll put them back together when we meet next.

I know, we're so unbearably cute I could vomit. <3

The next day was a busy one, and one of the most enjoyable ones so far. We started the day by heading off to a Turkish market for an early lunch. We ate some fabulous falafels, and I couldn't resist a mouth-watering strawberry nutella crepe. After browsing around the market, we then continued on to the Jewish Museum for the rest of the afternoon. That has been my favorite museum so far on the trip. It was fascinating, heartbreaking, solemn, thought-provoking, and beautiful. The exhibits themselves were increible, and the very arcitechture of the building was well worth the visit---elevating it from a simple museum trip to a unique experience. My favorite part of the museum was the Holocaust Tower. It's at the very end of the exhibit on the Holocaust, so you are already in a raw, solemn mood. The “tower” is an austere room with looming, gray walls. The only light is from a slit near the top of the tower, and it is unheated and very bitingly cold after the coming from the warm museum. Sounds from the outside street can be heard, but they are muted and garbled, ghostly noises that seem to come from a long ways away.

The Tower has no express purpose or aim as expressed by the architect, but it was nonetheless undeniably powerful.

After a few hours in the Jewish Museum, we ate a quick dinner and then went to go meet one of Nick's friends from work along with his girlfriend: Philip and Olivia.

Olivia and Nick led us into a fantastic little bar tucked away in the streets of downtown Berlin, called Salon zur Wilden Renate. The decor was Alice in Wonderland meets grunge meets Victorian England. The ceiling was full of old umbrella skeletons laced with flower garlands. Old velvet furniture littered the rooms, with wooden crates acting as tables. Black and white portraits hung from the walls, and a fire burned cheerfully in a wood stove. The whole place was a violent mishmash, and I loved it.

But that wasn't the best part. The best part came a couple hours later in the evening. When we had entered, we had been given a gold coin. They told us not to lose it, but to go and enjoy a few beers. About an hour or so later, a woman came into the room and one by one, she led members of our group away. I was the third to go. In the back of the bar, she put a blindfold around my head and then led me through a door. After a little ways, holding her hands as she guided me, she took the blindfold off and left me in a room all alone, with nothing but a video screen and a small slot that unmistakably read “insert coin here”.

From there started the most bizarre labyrinth I have ever experienced. I wish I could capture it was words, but it was so full of unsettling sights, such a sensory overload, that I know no mere description could possibly do it justice. So I will try to settle for a few snapshots (PREFACE: If you ever want to go to this labyrinth, I would suggest not reading this, because it is much better to go in with zero preconceptions!):

The central room was shaped like an egg, with what seemed like veins or spiderwebs running across the inside surface. Using these, you could climb all over it to reach the many tunnels going out to the rest of the labyrinth.

A pitch black tunnel with stones jutting up out of the ground designed to trip you. The only light was a strobe flash that went off maddeningly sparsely. As you groped your way through the darkness, a quiet rumbling sound became louder and louder, until it roared in your ears. You made your way through the tunnel, only to find that it was a dead end, and you have to creep all the way back.

A short tunnel with thousands of strips of heavy cloth or leather hanging down. As you make your way blindly through, you cannot feel any walls—only that slithery cloth all around you. And then, suddenly, you bump into a strip will bells tied to it, and their high pitched tinkling sends your pulse sky-rocketing.

A gray staircase with slanted, broken, uneven steps. The ceiling is so low that you nearly have to crawl up them.

A room no bigger than a closet, with a small chair seated in front of a ladder leading into darkness.

It was disorienting, creepy, and fabulous. Probably my favorite thing we've done in Berlin so far, and it felt very typically Berlin. I'm hoping to take Lindsay there at the end of the trip.

Speaking of Lindsay, she came in later that night! She arrived as scattered and hair-brained as ever: she had forgotten her purse at the Chinese restaurant where she had eaten dinner, she had missed her stop on the bus, and she hadn't brought enough money for the subsequent cab ride to Nick's apartment. It's good to see some things never change.

We went to bed soon after she arrived, but the next few days since then have been fabulous. WE retrieved her purse from the restaurant the next morning, then spend the day at the aquarium. I also tried my very first currywurst! It was dangerously delicious.

The next day, Lindsay and I ventured out on our own to the Gamaldegallerie, a fabulous art museum that exclusively houses old art from the Byzantine era up to the Renaissance. The collection was extensive, and I enjoyed every minute of it.

From there, it was off to Gottingen! We've been here for two days, and it's been very relaxed—days spent wandering around downtown and the University campus, eating at the mess hall, and getting a little work done while Lindsay is away at class. Even though we haven't been doing a lot of specific activities, being able to spend quality time with Lindsay has been more than I could ask for!

Nick is so proud of his hummus making skills



Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Europe Trip!

Hello everyone!

I'm sure you've been checking my blog daily, desperate for an update that never came. During the past month I've been traveling in Germany and some of the surrounding countries with my boyfriend and my sister. It was a spectacular trip, spent with the people I love most in the world, and I was much too busy having an amazing time to bother updating my blog.

However, don't despair. During the entire trip, I kept a journal that I updated semi-regularly. For the next few days, I will be posting excerpts from that journal along with pictures. Each day I'll post a week's worth of journal entries to catch you up to speed on my thrilling life. Without further ado, here we go!

January 17, 2014
I am in the air, en route from Abu Dhabi to Berlin, where Nick will be waiting at the airport at 6:35 in the morning to welcome me. I've been waiting for this day for so long that it hardly seems real. Of course, the jetlag and mental/physical exhaustion only add to that dreamlike quality. So many times I've imagined what it will be like...but now that the time is finally here, all that feels stripped away. There is about one more hour until we land, and the future seems unknowable in the best possible way. I am ready for the dreaming to stop and for the reality to begin.

January 20, 2014
It has been three very full days since I first arrived in Berlin, and they've been some of the happiest days of my life. It feels as though I've already been here for weeks because so many emotions have been packed into such a short amount of time.

The first day, we spent close to home. I was exhausted from the flight over and jetlag had taken its toll, which meant that we spent the entire day alternating between napping and exploring the surrounding neighborhood.

The next couple of days we've alternated between touristy activities and staying close to home. My second day in Berlin, we slept in well into the morning, then braved the sudden chilly weather to work out together in the gym. We then made the horrible mistake of waiting in the bitter cold for close to 45 minutes to acquire the famous Mustafa's Gemuse Kebap, which was admittedly delicious, but maybe not worth the close call with frostbite. After that ordeal, we had had enough of the cold for the day, and decided to make dinner at home, spending the evening in the cozy sanctuary of the apartment.

Yesterday proved to be even colder, and the temperature was accompanied by icy rain that froze on any surface, making it nearly impossible to go anywhere without your feet from flying out from under you (Berlin actually issued a weather emergency warning!). But by this point, we were both rather tired of hanging out at the apartment all day. So we braved the weather, and slipped and slid our way to the Neues Museum, looking at ancient artifacts and peering into the mesmerizing eyes of the bust of Nefertiti. After the museum, we met up with Duong, a long time friend of Nick's, and his family at the Brandenburg. We ended up all going together to experience the first part of Nick's Christmas gift to me: tickets to see the Hobbit together. It was an evening of fun, friends, and warmth.

A beautiful cathedral near the Neues Museum

The Brandenburg Gate

January 21, 2014
Yesterday, snow finally came to Berlin. It began overnight and left a thin white layer over everything in the city, making it seem very pure and clean. Nick and I ate a late breakfast, then wandered out into the world, cutting through the nearby park on the way to the gym. The trees were laden with snow, and it crunched quietly under our boots as we walked. After a long workout, we stopped by the market and then Nick took me to the second part of my Christmas gift: dinner at an Ethiopian restaurant. We ate with our hands, grabbing at delicious piles of meat, vegetables, dips, and mixtures with crepe-like pancakes, pausing to sip banana beer from a wooden bowl.

The food itself was divine, very hearty and zesty. The atmosphere was comfortable and warm. And the company, of course, was first class.

Today, we are currently on a train to Potsdam, just outside of Berlin. Nick is going to an interview for a possible internship, and then we will wander around the grounds of a nearby castle. I am excited, and I am very happy.


Someone was nice enough to give this poor statue a scarf

This was the first Stolperstein Memorial I saw in Berlin--small metal squares embedded into the ground in front of Jewish households affected by WWII.

Delicious Ethiopian food!

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Emei Mountain

About two weeks ago, the other teachers and I decided to venture out together to explore Sichuan Province one last time before we all scattered to the winds for the Spring Festival Holiday. The location we chose, with advice from some of our Chinese friends, was Emei Mountain, one of the four holy Buddhist mountains in China. The mountain is full of monasteries, with a famous pilgrimage site at the peak. There were buses that ran from the base of the mountain to the top, but we had been told that the more 'authentic' way to experience the mountain was to make a two day hike to the top, stopping at a monastery to sleep on the way. It sounded like a great plan at the time, and after all is said and done, I'm very grateful that we did the trip. It was full of awe-inspiring landscapes, and was easy to see why it is considered to be a holy site. But it was as stunning as it was grueling and mentally exhausting. Every person we talked to about visiting the mountain warned us that it was 'very difficult'. Being in pretty good physical shape and an active hiker back in America, I took this with a grain of salt...but it was safe to say that every single one of us underestimated the task we were undertaking. 

Still blissfully unaware of our impending saga, we set out on Friday afternoon after Cathy (one of our students) had finished with her exams and Bruce (another Chinese friend) got off work. After a short train ride and a night in a hotel at the base of the mountain, we made our way to the trail head the next morning, bright eyed and rosy cheeked:


The start to the trail was so typically Chinese. It was currently under construction, but that was no barrier. We made our way to the main trail by crossing through a rickety tunnel supported only by bamboo and trembling wooden boards. The first part of the hike was very enjoyable. We steadily made our way up a gently sloping trail, stopping to admire the plethora of crumbling stone carvings that blended into the rock walls, admiring the breath-taking scenery, and taking pictures of the pagodas and bridges that littered the trail.






But all good things come to an end. They say that trouble comes in threes, and so it was for us. The first of these troubles came about two hours into our hike: the monkeys.

To preface this part of the tale, I should tell you that one of the main reasons we had chosen Emei Mountain as our destination was that it is home to the Tibetan Macaques. I had never seen monkeys in the wild before, so I was hoping to glimpse them swinging among the branches or sitting high in the treetops. I should also mention that I had been warned that the monkeys were "very aggressive" to tourists. However, I naively assumed that being a fairly outdoorsy person myself, I was used to dealing with wild animals, such as squirrels, birds, or deer, that became too accustomed to tourists.

Our first introduction to the monkeys was in the form of a Chinese man scurrying down the trail as we were making our way up. As he charged past, he threw out a single sentence: "Houzi laile! The monkeys are coming!" We took this as a friendly tip rather than it's intended purpose of a solemn warning.

Not more than ten feet after the man, we saw our first two monkeys:


These two put an quick end to our optimistic misconceptions. A couple of Chinese girls had been hiking just ahead of us up the trail. Within the first few seconds of spotting our group, the bigger male monkey made his way down the railing and made a beeline for the two girls as the smaller one watched impassively from her perch. The male monkey sauntered up nonchalantly, and with no pomp or fanfare, promptly grabbed onto the purse of one of the girls and began a fierce tug-of-war, complete with teeth baring and growling.

While the monkeys were distracted, we took the opportunity to nervously skirt the confrontation and hesitantly move up the trail. Behind us, the girls managed to wrest the purse from the monkey and hurried after us. Both monkeys followed us all in lazy pursuit.

You would think that this would have been enough to make us book it through monkey territory without looking back, but being all too confident in our own abilities, we decided to wander through, taking pictures and marveling. 

Look at that face. So innocent.




It was all fun and games, until someone got jumped:


As we had been dawdling along, the monkeys had been surrounding us without our notice. The ones at the rear had become bold. With a single leap, one of the largest latched onto the back of Jono and violently began to try to rip the pack from his back. Jono stayed remarkably calm during the entire ordeal, continuing to walk as the Macaque pulled at his hair, bared its teeth, and yanked at the pack. At the bottom of the mountain, we had been given bamboo walking sticks as "protection against the monkeys". I tried to use mine now to poke the monkey off of Jono's back, but this proved to be a futile effort. With terrifying ease and unexpected strength, the Macaque ripped the bamboo from my hands and snarled. I scooped my bamboo up and retreated to a safer distance. Jono finally managed to get the monkey off by pulling off his pack, dumping the monkey onto the ground, shaking the pack from its grip, and then hightailing it up the trail, with a small band of monkeys in hot pursuit. At that point, we were all more than happy to get out of monkey territory, so we made quick time up the path, keeping close together and slamming our bamboo sticks onto the ground in front of the monkeys whenever they came too close.

With this trial behind us, it was time for our next big challenge. This came in the form of stairs. Lots and lots of stairs.

So. Many. Stairs.

From some of the previous pictures, you can see that Chinese mountains are not particularly gradual nor gently sloping. Instead, they spring sharply from the ground. This meant that the trail, after the initial part, was a single, continuous flight of stairs, sometimes going down for a short while, but more often steeply ascending. However, even this would not have been so difficult, if it were not for the third trial: the snow.


As we reached the snowline, we were enchanted by the beauty of the winter landscape for a good hour. The snow blanketed the forest in a ghostly veil, and it was fascinating to see tropical plants thriving in spite of the cold.


The austere beauty of the place couldn't be denied. However, after a couple more miles of trudging through the snow, and inching our way up and down icy staircases, the snow began to lose its charm. We warmed up to the point of sweating whenever we were actively hiking, but any time we stopped for more than a few minutes, the sweat would freeze on our bodies and we'd lose feeling in our fingers and toes. We were constantly shedding and putting on layers. Nevertheless, we continued on, tying metal teeth to the bottom of our shoes for grip, and marching through the cold. Many points during the day, we nearly gave up on reaching our previously chosen goal of a monastery two thirds of the way up the mountain, in favor of a hot bowl of noodles and sleeping away the exhaustion. In the end, though, we trudged on through the cold. We saw beautiful sites, breathtaking views, and we eventually struggled up one last flight of stairs to reach our chosen monastery after ten straight hours of hiking.








The monastery itself was pretty bare bones. There was no heating (only some electric blankets for our beds), and the only food was that which the monks ate, meaning that there was no meat, and it mostly consisted of various kinds of pickled vegetables. Nonetheless, we stuffed ourselves with rice and vegetables that night, and slept like a rock with our electric blankets turned to the highest setting.

The next day, we started out early again to make the last haul to the top of the mountain. The first couple hours were more of the same: stairs upon unending stairs.


Eventually, though, the stairs began to even out as we reached a sort of ridge to the mountains. We spent the last hour or so on an incredibly enjoyable stroll through the beautiful winter wonderland at the top of Emei Mountain.



We reached the summit a little before noon, and took a short cable car to the golden monastery site at the top, where Buddhist pilgrims come to visit from all over the world. It was a glorious feeling to reach the top. Pride, exhaustion, wonder, and elation all mixed together. Most of the other people there had simply taken the bus from the bottom of the mountain, and I viewed them all with a kind of good-humored condescension. 



We spent an hour or so wandering around the monastery complex and grabbing a bite to eat. But by this point, we had been exposed to extreme cold for more than a day. My cheeks and lips were chapped from the wind. I felt like Frodo at the end of the Lord of the Rings: I had forgotten what it was like to feel warmth, the sensation of grass under my feet, the taste of strawberries and cream. Weary and too cold to shiver any longer, we trooped over to the bus station and snagged a ride back down the mountain.

Looking back on it now, it's so easy to look at these pictures and see only the beauty, but I can still remember only too clearly that bone deep weariness, the icy cold that digs into your skin. It was without a doubt the most physically demanding experience of my life thus far. However, in spite of that (or perhaps because of it), it was also one of the most rewarding experiences of my life.

As James said at the end of the trip, it was a once-in-a-lifetime experience. Partly because I will never again see anyplace quite like Emei Mountain, with its serenity, beauty, magnificence, and peacefulness. And partly because I have no desire to put myself through that ever again.

Thursday, January 9, 2014

A Lost Teddy Bear

This past week, we've been having unusually good weather, so some of the other teachers and I decided to take advantage of that and take a jaunt around the countryside. Our goal was to finally get across the river and check out a village there. We had never gone over there previously because the school had completely bricked off any bridges going over to the other side of the river. So with no real plan or forethought, we wandered out of the college and sought a way across the river.

We ended up finding a bridge fairly quickly, after meandering down a side street that turned into a dirt road, but when we got to the other side of the river we found nothing of the village that we had been looking for, but instead a flattened, dusty construction site. It turned out that for months, our school had been buying up all of the land, evicting the people, and tearing down any and all buildings that had once been there at the beginning of the year. Bereft of our purpose, we spent a little time wandering around the barren wasteland.



At the edge of the large swath of bulldozed ground, we found train tracks that are currently being constructed to connect Pengshan to Chengdu. Out here, at the edge of town, we found some of the remains of the missing village. A few houses stood among patches of farmland. Even these, though, were marked with red spray painted characters, indicated that they too would soon be torn down.








After a little while spent wandering up and down the train tracks, we made our way back towards the college. The flattened land was monotonous, broken up only by piles of rubble and concrete. When we were almost back to the school, I saw something lying in the middle of the road, and bent to take a closer look:


It was a teddy bear, flattened underneath the wheels of a tractor or bulldozer. That teddy bear, looking like a piece of roadkill, made me more sad than all of the piles of brick and stone put together. A village, torn down in the matter of a few months to make way for more of this:


China is a rapidly changing and developing country. It is frantically scrambling to catch up with advanced western countries. But what is it losing in the process?

Friday, January 3, 2014

Happy New Year!



Brenna and I rang in the new year with wine and music on the roof! Happy New Year, everyone!