Showing posts with label berlin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label berlin. Show all posts

Monday, 29 February 2016

Preparation vs Traveller's Instinct

No matter how many times I fly, I still get butterflies and that flutter of excitement as I walk through the gate to board the plane. Even just looking at the departures board puts a smile on my face - I could go anywhere.

People who know me well won't be surprised to hear that within my first seven hours in Düsseldorf, I managed to find a great little Italian restaurant (the head chef was, of course, Italian) where I could finally satisfy my craving for a big plate of spaghetti ai frutti di mare. It was delicious. To be fair, in a country known for its meat and chips, as a pescatarian, I was left with little choice... It was so good that I went back twice more during my three day trip. (Although the second time I was devastated to find out they take Saturdays off and resorted to calling my mum for consolation.) I did generally find Dusseldorf to be quite a business-orientated, commercial and industrial city, and this was reflected in the architecture, food, bars, and restaurants on offer - not hugely interesting, quite touristy and generally over-priced. A fellow pianist I met there convinced me to be brave the streets of Aldstadt - known as Germany's 'longest' bar - and join him for a beer on Saturday evening. Despite the stag parties and out-of-towners who had popped into town to gorge themselves on cheap beer and cheesy music, standing on the streets surrounded by Europeans (without a hat or scarf!) with 1,50€ beer in my hand reminded me of being on the streets of Porto last summer and brought a huge smile to my face as I remembered how much I love being in Europe.

This didn't last long.

The next day - a Sunday - and it was drizzling as I spent three hours walking around with a bag full of music trying to find an open cafe with wifi, having forgotten that in Europe everything is CLOSED on a Sunday!

[I have been spoilt with the 24-hour Spar on my doorstep and array of 24-hour bars and cafés in St. P.]

Three days of quaintly-coloured houses and excessively clean residential streets and I was ready to move on.... to Vienna. A city where a ticket to the opera (3€) cost me less than my matcha chai latte (3,20€); it really is the capital city of music and I, unexpectedly, fell completely in love. The city is beautiful, not too clean and not too dirty, not too big and not too small. I was aware of the history and culture in the city but I was expected the place to be much more dated and stuck in the past - more similar to historical rich cities I have visited in Italy. The history is without a doubt there yet the place feels very current, dynamic and vibrant. A very fine balance between history, present and future, which is normally hard to get right but felt effortless in Vienna with the mix of charming little cafes, shops, and bars.  Not in the mood to make friends at the hostel, I revelled in taking a few hours each day to just wander around even if, surprise surprise, I did get lost a few times, having to rely on GCSE German to try and find my way back. The fact that most street names don't fit onto one line on the road sign is surely a sign that they are just too long?!

Somewhat on the expensive side for my limited unemployed-self's budget, I ate most of my meals buying food from supermarkets and I was baffled that lots of food shops seemed to open at 7:40am - very specific. I guess they decided that 7:30am was just that little bit too early... and thus I was deprived of my croissant breakfast as I made my way to the airport on the third day for the next stop on my whistle-stop music conservatory tour. Feeling destitute without my croissant, I was faced with the sad truth that public transport wasn't my best friend in this city either - another one to add to my list. The strength needed to open train doors on the metro often resulted in squeezing through the tiny gap on one side I had managed to create or someone taking pity on me and opening them for me and making it look ridiculously easy. The transport issues didn't end there. Round 2 of Alex getting on the metro going in the wrong direction when I was already cutting it fine for my early morning flight to Hamburg resulted in arriving to the airport two minutes before check-in closed... Though without running or even breaking into sweat. All in good time. Actually - I'll give you a tip - it's the most efficient way to travel. You get the best choice of seats if the plane isn't full - a guaranteed full row of seats on every flight. And I went straight through security and straight through the gate. No messing around. Even had time to douse myself in Chanel on the way - a surefire way to make friends on the plane.

In Hamburg, I was depressingly reminded of the English winter I had tried to escape. Wind and Rain. Although this city felt the most down-to-earth and studenty of the places I had been to so far - not only due to the fact that it seemed perfectly acceptable to light up a joint with friends in a bar. Having made it to my 11am meeting, I realised that I had perhaps taken my habit of 'who needs to prepare - I can just follow my gut instinct' one step too far as I had absolutely no idea where my hostel was, no wifi and no map. Three hours of walking around and few pointless metro rides, while desperately hoping my gut traveller's instinct would steer me in the right direction and I managed to find a hotel who found and printed directions to my hostel (4km away - I wasn't even close).

Dancing and chatting with friends into the early hours meant I was still up to see the most beautiful sunrise and so I decided to wander down to the harbour for the fish market to try a local Fischbrötchen and to get a proper view. I sat on the harbour wall eating my fish sandwich while thoroughly enjoying the spectacle of over-enthusiastic fruit sellers trying to bestow their fruit baskets onto unwilling tourists, while other stall holders rushed around trying to save their produce from some unannounced high levels of seawater, consequential flooding and seagulls trying to scrounge anything that just out of their reach.

The spectacular sunrise aside, I admittedly didn't fall in love with the place as I had done in Vienna and the sound of Berlin Calling was too strong to ignore...so I packed my bags and paid the full 8€ for the 3-hour bus ride to Berlin - with a huge grin on my face the entire way.  Despite the excitement of visiting new places, it can also be tiring and difficult and there is nothing like returning to a place that you know and already love.

There is a growing worry that Berlin won't be the same place is it now in a few years times. The unbelievable freedom for self expression and the mix of cultures - facilitated by the relatively cheap cost of living and the sheer amount of space - that you find there is hard to encounter elsewhere. Yet, this has the potential to create a vicious cycle, which means that such a wonderful, enlivening place can also be its own worst enemy. As a place becomes for 'trendy' and popular, more people arrive, prices go up, and, ironically, the base of artistic (and often poorer) people who create the quirky culture and social 'buzz' can no longer afford to live there.

Thinking about this as I walked through the streets of Berlin on my way to meet friends, who had also moved to Berlin a couple years ago for that very reason, I began wondering about where the "energy" or "feeling" of a place comes from. To what extent do preconceptions play a part? Is it the difference between knowing about a place before you arrive and arriving completely blind on a whim? Or is it based on certain characteristics you already look for in any place you visit, regardless of any prior knowledge or understanding? How is it you can feel the energy of the place within a few days of being there? I will always try to give any new place a few days of exploration and open-mindedness and I like arriving without knowing too much in order to form my own impression, although a little bit of history and a quick glance at a map definitely helps to get my bearings. However, I am often quick to judge and I can normally tell pretty soon if it's the right place for me. All of which brings me to the conclusion that it's hugely based on the people. The people who create the way of life, who create the shops, bars, parks, museums, buildings, industry, music and art.

Not one to make life easy for myself, I was constantly on edge keeping an eye out for ticket inspectors on the metro in the hope of saving a few euros so that I could buy more cheese to take back to Russia. Without a local sim card and no way of contacting people I needed to meet, it was slightly frustrating to find that lots of places seemed to have gone against the trend of the last few years by no longer having wifi for customers to use and some places even banning laptops. Shock horror they want people to actually talk to each other...! But with my own set of keys to my friend's apartment, I felt completely at home...even knowing which exit to use getting out of the metro - a undeniable sign of a local.

And before I knew it, with my bag full of cheese and pesto, having got completely carried away in Lidl, I was back to Moscow where I strangely felt warmer than I did in Germany. (They tend to go overboard with indoor heating in Russia). A place where three people are needed to check tickets on a nearly empty train: two to block each end of the carriage while the third checks the tickets - for a train that you can only board by going through ticket barriers anyway. A place where the entrance to the metro is nowhere near the exit so that trying to get back into a station you came out of can be somewhat challenging. A place where people are running everywhere, trying to get as much done as possible, but where you realise you actually spend half your time in (and on) the metro. And finally back to St. Petersburg to find temperatures back to around 0°c, the ice on the canals and rivers starting to melt and our cat lying on my bed awaiting my return.


A xxx





Düsseldorf: the place of alien trees and book fridges








Spaghetti ai frutti di mare
Sunrise on Sunday morning in Hamburg



Flooding issues...



Vienna: the most awful green for a concert hall



Standard parking: kind of found a place, kind of in it...

How to learn Russian: take part in a cake-decorating masterclass.... 















Thursday, 16 April 2015

Berlino - why we NEED to travel.

I've just learnt that France is also known as L'Hexagone. Why? If you connect its furthest points together they make the shape of a hexagon... You really do learn something new every day.

It's 3am and I'm half-way through an essay about the reasons for the fall in the birthrate in Italy which is asking me to relate to my own experiences in the country. Stuck for inspiration (surprise surprise - the Italian department is known for often providing inspiring essay topics such as whether or not a pope should be allowed to go on big brother), I decided to look over my blog posts of what is now a distant experience in order to try and trigger a sudden 600-word surge of genius.

And here we are. I've now re-read the majority of my blog posts, corrected a couple typos and decided I need to write at least a monthly post. Not ideal timing considering an unbelievable amount of deadlines and exams looming which now feel like the be all and end all but which, undoubtedly, in a couple years times will feel as distant as the butterflies I felt when embarking on my Erasmus adventure.

For lack of recent adventures to talk about (unless you count an exciting weekend away in Leicester) I must resort to talking about thinking about past adventures - but fear not...fingers crossed I will find myself in Berlin and Cologne in a few weeks time so the next blog post will actually be about a Russian abroad.

I did come to my senses and get to back work after this brief transgression so I'm now finishing writing this post while on the 7 hour bus ride from Berlin to Cologne.

I recently read an article on The Guardian online entitled 'Why we travel'. Following a relatively recent trend in travel articles highlighting the importance of experiencing other cultures and societies, it highlighted a couple aspects of traveling which I had never thought of before. Although we already know the growing importance of multi-cultural understanding, what this means practicality is less often noted. It creates an invaluable open-mindedness; an open-mindedness to ambiguities and multiple meanings actions and objects can have. This in turn all comes down to a change in the way we think.

Jonah Lehrer (the writer) interestingly points out our 'basic human desire' to travel as a migratory species. It seems that the importance does not lie in our final destination or the type of holiday we opt for but the mere fact of putting distance between ourselves and where we live. He elaborates on this idea by explaining a change in the way we think about things to seem further away. Further away from the problem and we can think further outside the box and our imagination is less constricted by the confines by associations which surround us in a familiar environment. Especially useful when solving particular problems, this also allows to exercise our brains in a different way meaning we return with a refreshed cognition and less restricted imagination. He comments that, ironically, though people go on holiday to 'escape' troubles and stresses at home, they should actually be using the distance to focus on them, taking advantage of the change in our thinking process that we experience.

Relating to this more personally (and from an artistic point of view), I do undoubtedly become mentally stuck when I've stayed in one place for an over-extended period of time. This does not mean I'm one to go swanning off on city breaks and beach holidays at every opportunity - even an overnight trip to Birmingham would do the trick - but it does mean a constant need for varying stimuli in my surrounding environment. Even after a few days in Berlin I have found a whole new array of sources of inspiration musically and feel a renewed sense of energy, motivation and determination.

I would say that coming to Berlin was a particularly challenging experience given that I haven't been to a country where I don't actually speak the language (apart from vague remnants from GCSE) in a while and I've only been to Germany once as a child so it's a culture and society relatively foreign to me. I weirdly felt slightly nervous trying to find the train which would take me from the airport into the city, although I do appreciate that nearly everyone speaks English to some degree so is was by no means the same feeling as arriving in China on my own last year! The main aspect for me is figuring out the new way that people relate to each other - every society is different and I would never want to comes across as rude or ignorant.

Though I was only there for three whole days with lots of university work and a couple administrative things to do in Berlin, I was still hugely touched by the sense of need for creativity and openness - a quality that Berlin is known for and attracts thousands of twenty-somethings to the city every year. While Bristol is arguably the most culturally stimulating and progressive british city I still find it, at times, slightly conservative in terms of a certain style of being culturally progressive being the one deemed to be the most interesting one. The 'berliners' seem much more open-minded and it really is a case of anything goes. Yet, this doesn't necessarily mean actual talent is sacrificed. The concentration of musical talent is extraordinary and the willingness to collaborate with fellow musicians in order to develop as a musician individually is strongly rooted in the culture. Sundays at Mauerpark was a wonderful experience with countless buskers sharing a variety of music. Friends were explaining how musicians will get there at 7 in order to secure the best busking spot for the day and sums in the region of 400 - 500 € can be earned in just one day!

I found it interesting that a capital city of such a prosperous country is actually one of the cheaper places to live in Germany and also isn't a city that would immediately come to mind when thinking about the most beautiful cities in Europe. The most characteristic element of Berlin's skyline is a tower similar to the radio tower in Shanghai. The beauty reveals itself in a different form and much closer to the ground in the art and music which lines the streets and fill the buildings of the city. East side gallery and multiple legal and illegal graffiti spots accompanied by people bringing amps, microphones and guitars with them for an afternoon in the park depicts a less commonly found beauty. It will be interesting to see how Cologne, the 4th largest city in Berlin, compares...

Vielen Dank for reading,

xx



'French Dom' 

Obligatory Brandenburg Gate Picture


East Side Gallery


Music in the park