Friday, August 30, 2013

Hamburg Part II

This photos are from the second part of my walk yesterday, ein angenehm Stadtbummel durch Hamburg.

My hostel was located in Sankt Pauli.  (As you might expect, what with its name being 100% Backpackers Sankt Pauli). It was an interesting neighborhood. You could almost feel the youth culture pulsing through it.  South Park Sankt Pauli seemed pretty appropriate.

Yet another thing that reminded me of Brooklyn: the chance to play oversized chess in a public park.



The park was a small one, but it had plenty of ceramic murals.



And palm tree sculptures, for that matter.


In Soviet Russia, the Simpsons watch you.
I could not resist photographing this fancy octopus.
The neighborhood park featured a plump and contented local cat.

A picture for Basho and Musashi.


Am Fischmarkt.

I thought the shape of this pedestrian bridge was really beautiful.
The name of this street is "Broad Street". There was also a "Long Street".  

I am an extremely mature individual and do not find the name of this street amusing at all.

Beatlesplatz!
And nearby, where they got their start.

And then I went back to the hostel, where I talked with some nice people from the Netherlands, France, and the USA.



Thursday, August 29, 2013

Taking Leave

Saying goodbye to Geoff was the hardest thing I've ever done, even more than the last time I left. I thought that maybe it would be easier this time, being three years older, stronger, and tougher. I was wrong. It wasn't nearly enough to make up for being in love three years longer, three years more deeply. 

We went for a motorcycle ride shortly before I left. In the short time Geoff's been biking and the still shorter time I've been a passenger, I've come to love it-the thrill of motion, the chance to communicate without words. On that ride, I felt in my body the truth of an obvious solution: the way to make the best of this year was to fully inhabit it. I couldn't stand spending the year consumed with missing Geoff, but I can do it consumed with living what's in front of me. 

I might have more to say about the trip later. There was a lot of emotion and a fair number of funny anecdotes. 

But for now, I'm just here-really here.  

Hamburg Part I

On the way to my hostel, I was greeted by a good omen: prayer flags fluttering a couple of stories up, strung completely across the street.

While checking out the Elbe, I found all sorts of pretty things. This one's for Geoff.

Some people peacefully sitting and watching the Elbe.


A tour bus, of all the boring things to take a picture of.  But this one was specially to me, because on my first day in Germany, I saw a tour bus from the city I still love.

Some views of the Fischmarket from a distance. 

As I walked through the city, I realized that it felt surprisingly familiar...in fact, that it reminded me specifically of Brooklyn. This is the building that first made me realize just what I was remembering. 
Ain't that the truth.








Friday, August 23, 2013

My (Entirely Legal) Graffiti


The other day, I told my boyfriend, Geoff, that I've always kind of wanted to do some graffiti but of course never have, since that would be illegal.  His response was that I would be welcome to put some on his car.  (As you will no doubt be astonished to hear, the car in question is not very valuable.)  

So today, this happened.

I printed out a stencil...

Then I traced it on to stiff plastic...

Cut it out with an exacto knife...


Scrubbed the car a little, since as you can see, it was a bit scruffy...


Attached my stencil and masked off the area to avoid making a mess...


Did a first and second coat...


And voila!


Not quite as crisp an image as I would have liked, but I'm still happy.


It just goes to show, with a little creativity and a lovely boyfriend, you can find a way to do things you thought you never could.

Yay, I tagged something! Very carefully and with the owner's permission!

;)






Thursday, August 22, 2013

6 Days

"There are years that ask questions, and years that answer." 
-Zora Neale Hurston

I had lunch with my mother and sister the other day, and we considered the question: for each of us, has it been a year that asked, or that answered?

For my sister, it's been a year of answers to questions large and small, of quiet answers to important questions and resonating answers to modest questions.  My mother has focused more on her loved ones' questions and answers this year.  

And for me?

Like music, some quotes speak to the heart immediately, while others take on meaning over time.  Zora Neale Hurston's quote touched me from the first moment it sunk it, but it's another, older quote that has shown me the way I want to interpret it.

"Genius is eternal patience." Attributed to Michelangelo, that meant very little to me when I first encountered it.  I have never chipped away marble to free the shape within the stone.  It didn't seem relevant to my life.

But I have had a year of questions, and I feel the shape of another year of questions approaching.  And slowly, I have learned to feel the genius in the kind of patience it takes to let things unfold.

I'm leaving for Germany in six days.  I'm excited to make the best of my year, to be active in making it everything I would want it to be.  

But I'll also do my best to be patient, to give space for questions and for answers to shape themselves.