Disclaimer: I acknowledge that this is not an official Department of State publication, and that the views and information presented are my own and do not represent the Fulbright U.S. Student Program or the Department of State or the Fulbright Foundation in Greece.

Wednesday, November 25, 2015

Attitude of Gratitude

Thanksgiving 

The cursor is blinking at me as I stare at that word sitting there at the top left corner of my blank Word doc—the name of a day that snuck up on me, but is almost here.  It’s not like I haven’t known it’s coming.  The day on the calendar has been marked in bold and rehearsals for a Thanksgiving play with awkward little 6th graders afraid to hold hands have been a main staple in our school day for the last three weeks.  And it’s not like I can’t think of anything to be thankful for.  Quite the opposite actually—my thankfulness overflows and I don’t have to look far to find things and ways to be thankful for and in each moment.  If anything, I’m having trouble organizing that thankfulness and trying to figure out where to even start…

Thanksgiving is just days away (or at least it was, as I was writing this initially.  Now as I edit, Thanksgiving is tomorrow).  But it feels different this year.  For many reasons.  And I struggle to start as I often do when I sit down at my computer in this blog frame of mind, because I want these words to mean something—and how much more so on/for/about a day all about giving thanks…

A year ago, one of the things that would have topped my thankful list would have been finally having a break from school and tests and work and heading home for a week off.  I would have felt every one of those three months of school and been more than ready for the break.  While part of me wishes this Thanksgiving offered a similar break and chance to go home, I’m moreso still just in such a state of surprise and almost disbelief that three months of this crazy adventure in Greece have already passed. Seriously, how can it be Thanksgiving already?


Part of it could be the weather (still sunny and pushing 70 most days J), which, especially when you compare it with the 14+ inches of snow and cold at home doesn’t feel especially “Thanksgiving-y”.  And part of it could be the environment.  I’m not a student this year and I’m not quite a teacher; I’m somewhere in between, but still in the place where the work is hard and the days are long and time flies (partly because you’re having fun, and partly because you’re just plain busy!).  I’m also in Greece, which is a state of being wrapped up in it’s own little bundle of thankfulness and uniqueness and wonder…

Right now, I’m sitting outside of the Starbucks that sits at the bottom of the hill leading to campus and home for the last three months and the next eight.  I’m enjoying the “quiet” of cars zoom, zooming past on the busy street that greets me when I lift my gaze from the screen, of muffled conversations flowing from that corner table over there and that man on his phone to my left, of the muted, jazzy music drifting quietly from the speakers I can see if I lift my gaze and crane my neck up and slightly back.  I’m enjoying the “stillness” of only having to move my fingers across the keys.  I’m enjoying the “freshness” of the air and the “warmth” of the outside breeze and dimming night sky.  I’m enjoying the tired weight of “restfulness” that sits on my shoulders and tugs at my eyes.  It’s nice to have a day to pause and reflect and look forward after weeks of go-go-go and before weeks of more.

I opened and saved a blog file and called it “Marathon”.  That happened two weeks ago today and I’m still reeling from and feeling it.  That file will stay blank yet a while longer.  I opened this file and called it “Thanksgiving”, figuring I should get a jump on it now before the busy week ahead commences, if I wanted even a chance at posting it in the same season as this day. 


So here I am.


And I still don’t know how exactly I want to continue.  I’m still waiting to see where these words will lead.


I’m thankful for words—words that will take wing from my heart to the page, from here in Greece to you; words from my family that fly across the sea in the sweet and thoughtful cards they stamp and address my way, words that will at long last take wing back to them on the postcards I finally got around to sending last week (keep an eye on the mailbox ;) ) ; winged words and whispers that take the prayers of my grateful and troubled heart to the One who’s always listening; words that flutter back and forth with friends, across the table, across the classroom, across the sidewalk, across Facebook messenger; words that rest their wings and stay on the page, content to nest there for now and help me process the life that is happening.


I’m thankful for my family and for home.  And I’m thankful for their support and understanding as I spread my wings and fly this year.  (You always manage to ground me, no matter how many miles away I am.)  I’m thankful for their concern and their encouragement and their help.  I’m thankful for the ability to stay connected with them across the seas, to share this experience with them at least virtually for now, until they can fly over here to share it with me.  (psssstttt! Book your tickets!!!!)


I’m thankful for old friends who stay connected and offer a piece of home, no matter the time or the distance that separates the times we talk. 

And I’m thankful for new friends, too, to live and work and share with in this adventure of a lifetime.  Who are there to grab coffee or try a new restaurant, to try a new recipe and go to the store for the ingredients.  Who are there to go for a run with you then cheer you on at the toughest mile marker to give you the momentum you need to finish strong.  Who are there to help you process, to offer advice, to be a friend.  Who are there to keep you sane on a bus full of kids, to laugh with at the antics of those kids.  Who are just there.  Who help make this new place a home for the time we are here.


I’m thankful for the opportunity to be here.  I’m thankful for what I’ve already done and seen and experienced and I’m thankful for the many things that yet lay waiting in store.  I’m thankful for the ways in which I’ve grown from being here, for what I’ve learned in this time—about me, about the world, about life.  About being thankful.  I’m thankful for this season I am in.  For the chance and the time to be present in the moment, to live life and live it to the fullest, to focus on the good.


I’m thankful for the freedom to choose, even if the choosing isn’t necessarily easy.


And I’m thankful that you don’t have to necessarily be thankful for everything, but that you can look for and find a way to be thankful in everything… Strive to be present, to have an attitude of gratitude.


On Thursday, as my family at home, and perhaps your family, too, sits down together to enjoy a Thanksgiving meal, try to be thankful in that moment, wherever you are.  Remember the people who might be absent from the chairs around your table, and think about the people who won’t necessarily be able to focus on their thanks with a plate full of turkey.  Enjoy your meal and enjoy your day with loved ones—and have an extra slice of apple pie for me J


On Thursday, as you eat turkey and stuffing and cornbread and pie, our sixth graders will be putting on a school play, as we share a piece of the Thanksgiving pie here in Greece.  If you want to read the whole thing, let me know, but out of all of it, the last lines jump out to me--they resonate; and I want them to resonate for you, too; so I’ll just end with these final thoughts and leave them here for now:


 “Today we give thanks, for in thanks there is giving, and if we are sharing and caring, every day can be cause for Thanksgiving!”… Every day is cause for thanksgiving—so let’s give thanks, now shall we:

We are thankful for new friends and for our old friends, for the power of acceptance.

We are thankful for people we meet, that don’t even know us yet show us great kindness.

We are thankful for small mercies and the kindness of strangers, compassion that can conquer all. 

We are thankful for sharing and connecting to our fellow humans, for knowing empathy. 

We are thankful for the steps that have brought us this far.

We are thankful for the people who have gone before us, who have made this moment possible, and we look forward to the journey ahead, praying we can face it with strength and courage, with family and friends.  With thanks.  And with giving.


HAPPY THANKSGIVING!

~*~



Thursday, November 19, 2015

Istanbul: a whole new world, a whole new normal...


The plane ride we took was less than an hour, but when we landed it felt like we had landed in a whole new world.  Each and every one of my senses opened and strained forward, eager to take it all in. 

I was immersed in a place that was completely different from the “normal” I had been used to my whole life, different even from the semi-new “normal” I’ve gotten used to during these last couple months in Greece.  Here, in Istanbul, everything

looked,
 smelled,
   tasted,
  sounded,       
    felt

different.  Not a bad different by any means, just different. A new different…


Take a walk down the cobblestone street.  Notice the subtle pattern laid into the stone on the path before you.  Admire that the sidewalks are actually flat and walkable compared to the ones you’ve been navigating lately.  

Breathe it in and let it out, and let the aromas of sweets and meats not yet tasted waft through.  Feel the rumbly in your tumbly as another sense responds to the new normal greeting you.  

Seek out a restaurant that will help you satisfy this new sense, this new hunger.  Feel overwhelmed by the choices before you: another 5 restaurants or more down every side street, with tables decked out in intricate cloth, seats propped with cushy cushions, light streaming from colorful lanterns strung along the ceiling, hanging low to illuminate the feast set before tourists and locals, and enthusiastic waiters calling first in a language unfamiliar and then in English sung in an accent that falls different, that rings out and meets your ears with new inflections and intonations.  Pick this one, pick that, anywhere you pick is a good choice (until the next day when you pick one that serves up a sandwich which gives you your chance to taste liver for the first time J).  

Pull your sweatshirt jacket a little tighter against the chill of the air, lift your face to the sun that joins you in the fight against that chill.  

Look up at the rounded tops of the mosques that dot the landscape in a similar but altogether different way than the churches you’ve seen dotting the landscapes of other places you’ve been.  Hear the blair of what almost sounds at first like the cry of a tornado siren (only because that’s the only such whole-city call you’ve ever heard in your life before), but which is actually a call to prayer.  

See the mosaics and the intricacies of the ancient opulence within these buildings you visit, but feel the openness of the crowded middle and the absence of seats.  Photobomb the tourists taking selfies and try not to openly stare at those for whom this place is holy and not merely a check on the must-see tourist list.  

Look around and see the subtle changes in the style of the buildings and dress alike; breathe deep the new scents surrounding; taste savory and succulent and sweet dishes you can’t even pronounce; check yourself as your tongue trips over the ευχαριστώ that has become instinct but which doesn't carry meaning here and try to wrap your mouth around the newly-learned teşekkür ederim; hear the symphony of languages new and old rising and falling against the motifs of plodding footsteps, shop-owners and tour-guides hailing, and cars driving.  Feel that this place is different.


But look again.  Look past the clamor and hustle and bustle of tourists and tourist-catering gift-shops and eateries.  Look closer and see this country’s people going about their daily lives—living out their normal.  Think at first how this “normal” is so different from the “normal” you grew up with.  Think now that there are normals and cross sections of life being lived out all over the world; and the “normals” you’ve seen and experienced are only a teeny tiny fraction of what exists in the world. 

Look at your life.  Think about your daily worries, thoughts, highlights, activities.  Now multiply that by the people you know.  Now the people in your town.  Now the people in your county.  Now the people in your state. Now the people in your country.  Now the people in the world…

It’s almost too much to fathom, but just pause a moment and appreciate the life that is being lived—

so much life!


Whether you walk down the street of your hometown or hop onto a plane that takes you half way around the world, open yourself to see, taste, smell, hear, feel the life around you.  Don’t get caught up in "normal".  And don’t close your senses to what is around you.  Breathe it in and let it out…





(Funny little afterthought: I just glanced up at the toolbar in this blogger editing browser and noticed that the name of the default font is "Normal".  I'll just leave that little tidbit here for now... :) )


















Tuesday, November 17, 2015

Mosaics


I’ve been trying to write more while I’m here in Greece—to capture and put down in writing the thoughts and experiences that are my life right now, to have them to look at and remember, to hold onto a piece of these wonderful moments as the winds of time fly by and try to blow them away, out of my hand and into the swirling air like so many leaves… And I’ve been pretty good about keeping up with my writing, in my own personal travel log/journal of sorts, if not always as consistently as I would like on this blog forum.

But even the daily journal entries I’ve managed to pen (or rather, type) won’t quite paint a picture complete—like a mosaic, gaps, even whole pieces of tiles, remain amidst the shattered attempt to piece back together the life that has happened in the time that has passed.  The writing that does occur, that has actually made its way to the page—the resulting mosaic—can still be beautiful, but it’s no photograph and will never exactly and wholly and completely replicate that life that has been lived (though we could even dispute the truth in photographs, but not here, or at least not now)…

So life happens.  And after it happens, it’s like you drop the tile (the day, the moment of life you just lived).  And there on the floor or the table lie the colorful shards of the time you’ve just lived, so fragmented are your thoughts about that day or that moment.  And you might write, to try to pick up the fragments and piece them together, recreate the image of life in a mosaic, or you can let them lie where they fall… 

And as you work, you may happen to pick up a piece rather jagged and jaded—you might try to handle a shard, a thought, too sharp and get cut in the process.  But even when you bleed, you don’t stop working, you can’t stop pressing forward (isn’t that what bandaids are for? J).  Just choose a new piece, or handle that sharp one with extra care, but always keep moving.  You don’t stop because it hurts.  You still work at your craft, because there’s beauty in the pain of creating, or in in this case recreating. 

Moreover, try as you might, you can’t save every piece.  You will inevitably miss one or two—or two hundred.  You might not even make it down to your studio for days—even weeks, months, years at a time…

But you think and you talk and you attempt to process and you think some more and you write… And maybe eventually you end up with a mosaic that helps, that heals; one that shows what life was or maybe what it wasn’t or maybe better than it was or if you’re lucky maybe you’ll wind up with a mosaic that unveils the spirit of that moment; one that you can share or keep secret or shatter again so you can try/create anew (or not…); one that’s beautiful, in spite of the gaps and even because of them…

So you write….. So I write….. What will this mosaic look like when I next view it?....

I started this mosaic in the moments before our plane took off to Istanbul last Friday.  I didn’t realize then that actual mosaics would be part of the landscape I viewed when I was there.  I didn’t know that my musings about mosaics in air would be reflected in the mosaics that have survived the test of time for hundreds of years.  And now I’m going back and looking at the words I used to create my mosaic for those moments on the plane,; and I’m adding to it, I’m re-piecing some of it, I’m making it into a mosaic to share with you.

Look now at these pieces arranged in the mosaic here—captured moments that followed in the wake of taking off:

We’re in the air.  What a strange thing it is to fly.  How incredible.  What a strange thing it is to be on a flight to Istanbul on a random Friday night in November with four friends brought together by circumstances too wild and crazy to trace, to meet an old friend about to be brought together with her by circumstances again too wild and crazy to trace.  How incredible.  This is my life right now.  And for this I am most definitely thankful.  This journal I write in now might become my travel diary by default (esp. as I go on these trips without a computer).  And oh, adventures there will be.  Many a mosaic will dance across these pages—tales from near and far.  See how the landscape can change depending on which piece you pick up and where you place it?

Who knew this thirst for adventure lay sleeping underneath the surface all these years?  Who knew the opportunity to quench it would present itself as it did? I’m so glad that it did…

Pick up these pieces, lay them down;
bright lights inside, dark all around.
One earbud in, now let’s make it two. 
How long since/‘till the couple next to me said/says “I do”. 
Four friends ahead, spread out on the plane;
one yet to meet us—stare out this clear pane.
Thoughtful reflections flow from this blue pen,
fragmented pieces to be picked up, when?
Adventure awaits, here even ‘fore we land. 
Trusting Your promise—keep us safe in Your hands…


In the time that has passed, there is life that’s been lived.  The pieces fall and break and my mind races with thoughts.  My hands move across these keys as my thoughts scan the shards.  I pick one up and examine it, pause to consider where it fits now in this new creation, this mosaic of those moments of life I’ve just lived.  Try and pick up those pieces.  Here’s where they wound up.  Here’s my mosaic…

Wednesday, November 11, 2015

μια άποψη της Γαλλίας (a view of France)

Okay. Well, I’ve at least opened Word and done the whole open-an-old-blog-post-“Save-as”-a-new-file-(blog post #18!)-wipe-clean-the-screen-in-one-fluid-‘command’+‘a’+‘delete’-motion-then-stare-at-the-cursor-blinking-back-at-me-against-the-vast-white-void-as-my-thoughts-swirl-around-the-cobwebs-in-my-mind-and-all-my-words-flee-like-so-many-birds-in-winged-flight routine!

But, hey, look—now I have words and the white landscape doesn’t look quite so vast and cold and empty. Although, these aren’t the words I thought would start this post…but then again, when have I ever set down to write and had the words take me exactly where I imagined/thought/planned they would before I set down to type them…

A week ago (well, actually, it’s been 2 weeks now, as I finally get around to editing this…) I got on a plane and left the place that has become a home-away-from-home for the last two months (yes, it’s been 2 months already!).  Only, for the first time ever I think, the next plane ride/trip after the initial one that brought me to a new place, didn’t take me home.  I left a place where they spoke Greek and landed in a place where the language was a bit more familiar, but still wasn’t English, still wasn’t mine.

Now, as I continue writing this, it’s been a good week and a half since I got on that plane. Even though I opened the document and went through that whole routine of saving-as and starting over, life happened (as it has a tendency to do) and setting down to actually write this blog and give form to the ideas swirling around inside my head kept getting pushed to the backburner so I could turn my focus to school and running and cooking and hanging out and Greek homework and answering emails and sleep and…

I really should be heading to sleep now instead of writing this (if I’m not careful, Ill keep writing and not end up closing my computer until the clock in the corner drops the 0 from the current time of 10:56…).  Why do words call now? Why do things keep popping up that take priority away from writing?

(and I’m sure you’re probably wondering why on earth she doesn’t just get on with writing about France instead of wallowing in this reflective tangent…)

Well, perhaps I’ll get to actually writing about the amazing and beautiful and authentic and restful and wonderful long weekend in France a week and a half ago next time I open up this document (and hopefully that will be before my next big trip!).  But for now, enjoy this detour through the mires of my mind, and see just a small glimpse of how writing works for me…or just skip to the part about France—it’s coming, I promise J

I wake up and I try to squeeze in some writing time. There are so many ideas and thoughts that were brought to the surface that I want to try and unravel.  And they’ve been floating around in my head as potential pieces of a potential blogpost.  And until now, they’ve only been half-formed, abstract possibilities—like when what you want to say is on the tip of your tongue, like when you’re standing on the edge of an idea, like when what you need to see is just around the corner but you can’t open your eyes or crane your neck far enough to actually see it.  Like when you want to climb a mountain but the road to get there is shrouded in fog; you keep climbing slowly, almost start and stop at times, but you keep plodding forward, word by word, until eventually you break through the clouds and you finally see the top the mountain you’ve been looking for; and then it’s still some work to make your way to the top and actually accomplish the act of climbing it (or writing it); and then you have to go back down the way you came, and maybe see new things before or remember to fix and be careful of your steps at other junctures as you edit your initial climb... 

There are a bunch of possibilities for what and how I could write the rest of this post.  And I want to start, but I can’t quite see or even completely wrap my head around them all the way myself, and so I hesitate to start uncovering them—and I turn to tangential metacognitive ramblings about how I think about thinking and how I approach writing.  But I can only take up so much time and blank space with that kind of writing (well, actually I could honestly take up quite a lot more, but for the sake of those of you actually taking some of your precious time to read this, I’ll try to move on).

Here is the essence of some of the thoughts that have been swirling—let me try to wrangle them up and pen them in this paragraph here so that they’re at least semi-contained and mostly visible, even if they still move and wriggle around a lot; they might be easier to tame if I only have to run around the fenced yard instead of the world trying to catch them (wait, when did I start turning to barnyard metaphors in my writing??).

Anyway, the quick list:

The first twinge of homesickness.  Language—hearing it, feeling it, turning to it (and in surprising ways).  Being present—truly present.  The balance of activity-packed-days and 8-hours-of-sleep-nights (ah, how I’d missed you—ugh how I miss you again… :p).  The importance and impact of a single moment—and walking backward along the path, tracing the steps that led you to where you are right at this new moment.  Making time for more moments of quiet and writing and reflection..  The beautiful paradox of a peacefully quiet big city.  Walking around in that peaceful calm.  Capturing moments in pictures versus capturing them in writing. A picture is worth a thousand words but why are they easier to edit than it is for me to sit down and type these 988 words?  (990 now…)  Thoughts and where they land.  Connecting with an old friend and fellow introvert/writer. Successfully navigating my first trip abroad, my first trip “alone”.  Making the most of each moment, balancing touristy must-dos with more authentic, local experiences.  Climbing a freaking mountain! Breathe it in and let it out.  Realizing the place you’ve lived for the last two months and the people you’ve shared this adventure with have become home.  Returning and feeling the relief of setting your sights again on something familiar, wanting to run up the hill you usually trudge up. “Home” again home again, jiggity jog…

And this is really life right now and it’s wonderful and—these are the moments I need to turn back to and remember when I’m struggling to maintain an attitude of gratitude (thanks, Bridget for the rhyme and more importantly for the reminder ;))…

Anyway, so that’s just a peek into the marvelous mire of my thoughts concerning France.  And yes, it’s yet another, different time that I’m sitting down to write this and continue the rambling.  Can you see now why it’s taken so long to finish writing this post?  Why I am even now still writing it and I’ve been back a week? Why I call this space “On Winged Words…”?

*Well, actually there are a few nuances behind that title and my reasons for choosing it—which could and probably should be a blog post at some point… But anyway, these thoughts are so hard to capture and describe adequately and completely and it’s difficult sometimes to find the words…It’s as if they have wings—ehhhh, winged words?? Get it?? ;)  And, these words are like so many birds, winged and ready to take flight.  I’m lucky to even get these many down on paper, and these ones I am writing, pulling from the air and putting down right here right now are flighty at best, poised, ready to take wing again on their way to you… *

Anyway, that’s another tangent. 

So, let’s start hogtying these musings of France we just corralled into the pen.  We touched briefly already on the debut of homesickness, so let’s mosey on over and see what language has to say (though it has quite a lot to say, indeed…). 

In France they speak French.  Je comprends un peu le français (= I understand a little French).  Emphasis on the un peu (little bit).  In Greece they speak Greek.   Καταλαβαίνω λίγο ελληνικά (Katalavaino ligo ellinika = I understand a little Greek). Major emphasis on the λίγο (little bit)—but I’m learning…

I’ve gotten fairly used to walking around amidst the complex intonations of the Greek language that is slowly, slowly making the move from foreign to familiar (or at least more familiar than before).  But even as I walked through the airport and boarded the plane to France, I could hear and feel the lilt of the conversations around me shifting.  And then I was in France and it was all French to me.  And it’s very interesting (a boring word, I know, but I can’t describe intelligently enough how language sounds, so “interesting” will have to suffice for now), it’s very interesting how the two language sound different, and how they both sound different from English.  It just feels different (and honestly a little bit quieter) listening to French conversation surrounding than Greek.  And perhaps that has something to do with my being more familiar with French than Greek at this point in time, because at first at school when I would listen to my students, their Greek sounded so loud and almost just like noise, but their English has a lilting, almost melodious, and softer quality to it.  (and maybe that’s because I don’t know Greek yet and can’t recognize the sounds as having any meaning outside of noise yet).  And I recognized more French than I anticipated, especially reading it.  But even still, listening to the French language, straining to pick out the words I knew and make sense of the words surrounding, and trying to form a coherent response rather than defaulting to the deer-in-the-headlights-panic-stare and praying they speak English, proved quite an endeavor, indeed. 

And, too, it’s weird living in a place where the language and culture are so different from the one where you grew up and then going to visit a new place that, though really not so far away in distance, is different yet, and seeing and hearing a language and a culture that is different from what you have been immersed in and at least semi-familiar but still not yours.  It’s certainly not a bad thing and I’m truly thankful for the opportunity to experience this phenomenon, but it’s just really kind of weird to be the “foreigner”. But eye-opening, heart-opening, enlightening, preparing me for future encounters when I am no longer the “foreigner” in the situation, perhaps… And also, it’s getting kind of complicated to explain where I am and what in the world I’m doing here in this part of the world.  Like, I’m from America but I’m living in Greece teaching for a year and I’m just visiting your neck of the woods for a couple of days…But I’m not complaining, it’s certainly a good problem to have.

But the weirdest thing of all is that while I was in France I felt a closer kinship to my newly planted Greek roots.  For instance, one of my first French interactions involved my getting off a bus that took us from the airport to the metro station and I wanted to say thank you, though obviously in their language.  I do know the French version—people who haven’t even taken a lick of French know the French version.  But as I went to get off the bus my mind rifled through the files of “thank you’s” and in that split second for some reason could not come up with merci.  What’s weird though is that it didn’t even come up with a proper English “thank you”.  No, my first instinct was ευχαριστώ (efharisto), the Greek version, one of the first few words I made sure I learned once I got here.  Well, maybe it’s not so weird, but it was surprising.  I guess I didn’t anticipate my mind taking me there.  And in subsequent interactions, my instinct was to revert to the few Greek phrases I know.  Walking through a crowd, nearly bumping into someone and I found my tongue tripping past a συγνώμη (signomi) on it’s way to the proper pardonne or excusez-moi.   And when I heard something that sounded like “edo” and “kala” (= “here” and “good”) from a couple with their dog atop the Bastille, sounds of a language that didn’t sound French, but sounded familiar—I got really excited to be near and hear Greek people!

But anyway, language is weird—and that’s only skimming the surface of some of the surf that was churned up during my time in France.

Being away, being on my own travelling, being with new people, was a new adventure but also a new lesson in being truly present in the moment—my mantra, goal, ideal for the year. 

It was also a nice break from the busyness and craziness of life these last two months.  A long weekend and break from the school routine.  A chance to at least get a little more sleep than usual—and that extra hour of sleep for daylight savings time, come a week early here in Europe, was rather nice.  And even if you don’t sleep very much longer quantitatively, sometimes just waiting to get up until even 8 in the morning seems like a treat when you’re used to rising before the sun.  (oh, can we just pause for a second to mourn the reduction in sun time? It still rises late but sets way, way too early—can’t even fit a full run in before the sun is fading from the sky in shades of pink and orange…anyway.)  But yeah, even though my days in France were jam-packed and we walked literally all over and were out exploring and experiencing the day from morning till night, and even though they were technically tiring days, it was also very much a time of relaxation.  It was a chance to breathe air that felt different, bask in a sound altogether different, take in a literal change of scenery, and experience something wholly different and wholly wonderful and wholly renewing.


While I’ve been here in Greece, and even before truth be told, there have been several occasions where I have found myself pausing to think about the steps that have led me here, to try and trace back the sequence of events that led me to this very moment, sitting in my bed, typing away, which would seem rather ordinary—except for the fact of being in Greece and doing this!  And I think about the road that brought me here and the people I have met along the way who helped me get here and how if even one little thing was different, I might not be here…this might not have happened…

And this here is really a story worthy of its own blog post in and of its own right, and perhaps one of these days I’ll get around to it.  But it’s worth thinking about, for a moment, pausing and taking that walk down memory lane, rewinding… And I found myself thinking about the steps that took me first to Greece and then to France.  And the really quite unlikely chance occurrence wherein I met the friend who hosted me there (thank you again, Emily!!).  If we hadn’t met in that random way my senior year of high school when I was just sitting in some classes still deciding if that’s where I wanted to go, then I wouldn’t be sitting at a Creperie in Grenoble, France, with an old/new friend, talking and connecting and reflecting...  And if my Grandma hadn’t gone to Carthage then who knows if I ever would have even looked into going there and then I certainly wouldn’t be sitting (now in my kitchen) here in Greece typing about going to France. And, and, and…it’s enough to make your brain hurt J

On to the next thought…

So, Grenoble is a pretty decently sized city (like 200,000 or so), but walking around you wouldn’t necessarily thing that.  It’s quiet, it’s calm.  It’s nice.  I like the lifestyle of walking—both there in Grenoble and here in Greece.  I don’t miss driving so much (except maybe when I’m still half a mile from home weighted down by the shopping bags cutting ribbons into my forearms, doing that awkward shuffle/run as you feel the soreness creeping in between your shoulder blades and you start to question whether you really needed all those apples and two jars of pasta sauce for the cabinets to save for a rainy day…).  But it’s really nice having so many things accessible within walking distance and/or via public transport—restaurants and museums and parks and stores and markets and church and school and mountains…oh, the mountains.  I think I’ve fallen slightly in love with mountains.  I love the ones I saw this summer in Colorado.  I loved the ones I climbed in France.  And I love the ones that surround me in Athens’ warm embrace and welcomed me home…

But back to the mountains I climbed in France.  It was absolutely incredible.  And the pictures try and these words I wrote the night after the climb will try, but they all fall short of fully capturing the feeling of making it to the top…

I’m tired.  But it’s the good kind of tired.  It’s the kind of tired that only comes after a long day of exercise, fresh air, and sunshine.  It’s the kind that makes you laugh instead of cry when you feel the soreness in muscles you haven’t used in a while.  It’s the kind of tired that makes you smile as you think and write about it, the kind that makes you force your eyes to stay open just a wee bit longer so you can post pictures and write a little about the day to try to capture the beauty of it, it’s the kind of tired that’s a truly good tired.  Right now, in this moment, I can say with complete confidence that today was a good day and that I’m glad I came.  Today we went hiking, literally hiking and climbing in the alps.  It was incredible.  The pictures I took don’t do it justice… Anyways.  We drove halfway up the mountain (thank goodness for the car so we could do that).  Then we started hiking up through leaves and trees. It was harder than I anticipated.  My calves were burning.  I was breathing heavily.  I wondered what I had gotten myself into.  I kinda wanted to stop.  But I definitely didn’t want to look weak and I really did want to climb.  So we kept going, taking breaks every now and again.  We made it to above the deciduous (leafy) trees (which were actually quite pretty with the changing colors that actually look like fall) and the path evened out for a while.  But then it got steeper again.  And it was actually really tough.  Not much space in my lungs for talking.  I was just trying to focus on putting one foot in front of the other and not falling to my death.  Lord keep me safe.  Thank You for keeping me safe.  And after every rough patch, tough spot, hard climb, you could lift your eyes and see these gorgeous, breathtaking views.  And the peace and quiet that come with the distance from the city that the mountain brings. And the fresh air.  Incredible.  Spectacular.  Wonderful.  Feel the breathing, in your lungs.  Lift your face, warm against the sun.  Be not blinded, by what you see.  But in this moment, touch eternity.  Some moments were definitely tough. But it was so worth it.  We picnicked at the very top.  We climbed back down a different way that was easier, though it had some spots that were more climbing by nature, but those were kinda fun.  I’m getting tired so this is getting kinda sparse.  I’m gonna have to turn in soon.  But it was a good day.  20,000 steps, 2000+meters, sore muscles, tired eyes, a sandwich an apple and some chocolate, .75 liters of water, smart wool socks, old navy kapris, jcpenny sweatshirt, extra old navy zip up, ncur backpack, good company, a taxing climb, a good workout, amazing views, peace and quiet and stillness and fresh air, incredible atmosphere, awe-some, prayers to God, prayers of safety answered, climb up, climb down, autumn changing colors, beautiful, wonderful, amazing.  And a raccluet (essentially meat and potatoes and melted cheese, a regional traditional meal) to top it off.  Definitely not your average tourist experience.  Definitely something incredible to experience.  Thank You.  A good day.  Definitely a good day.

But yeah, I climbed a mountain…

And, of course, I took some pictures.  That’s another goal of mine for this year: to take more pictures to capture the moment, in addition to writing consistently to capture and make concrete more moments (a feat I’m keeping up with, at least in the word-doc running journal saved on my computer which the world will only see glimpses of in these short little italicized excerpts because the rest is just a jumbled, rambling stream-of-conscious mess…). 

And really, these primary goals for the year go hand in hand, or maybe rather arm in arm because they’re kinda germ-a-fobes… Because at the core I’m really focused on making the most of every single moment that I’m here—whether I’m at the top of a mountain (literally or metaphorically), or in the middle of a class-full of Greek first graders, waiting for a bus or for water to boil, or eating the best chocolate cake I’ve ever tasted, talking with a friend or sinking in to some reflective downtime in the quiet of my room.  I want to capture these moments, or at least a piece of them, because I think that will help me remember them, help make them a more elemental and permanent part of me. 

So I want to write—what I’m doing what I’m seeing how I’m feeling the good the bad the ugly the boring.  And I want to take pictures and actually print them—the mountains and the valleys.  And I want to connect with people—whether it’s talking with a student struggling with English about football (soccer) as he explains to me the game he loves and points to the different players on the computer screen before us, whether it’s sharing stories while sharing a meal, whether it’s swapping smiles and simple Greek phrases with the apple vendor at the local Tuesday laiki, whether it’s trying out new recipes in the kitchen or pounding out the frustrations on the track with new friends…

I don’t want to just live in Greece this year.  I want to live in Greece this year.

Feel the breathing…
In your lungs…
Lift your face…
Warm against the sun…
            (tenth avenue north)

So that’s partly why it’s taken so long to get this blog post up and running.  Life has just been happening.  And also there was this strange thing that happened where it was bizarrely easier and more pressing to edit/post pictures than write/edit/post these words (maybe because it was one less step, the creating step—the hardest step…).  And also it just takes time to write sometimes, especially when the words don’t want to land.  And also, also: sleep. 

I started this blog post almost two weeks ago—you know, with that whole opening-an-old-blog-post-and-resaving-it-and-starting-fresh-song-and-dance.  And it’s taken about as many twists and turns as a Greek motorbike weaving in and out of traffic, occasionally up on the sidewalk.  (and if you’ve stuck it out this long, I commend you).    This was a view of France, a view of my writing mind, a view of where the winged words will take you sometimes…………………