Notice also the "god-like" glow of the night-time shot. They'll just sit out here at night and watch the pool all night like a television. Well, healthier at least, you gotta give them that!
Thursday, June 30, 2005
One last Czech note...
The neighbors have continued to marvel me, as they really do talk about the pool nonstop! It is a site to behold, so much so that David secured a photo for me. (The neighbor happily invited me over for a night of vodka drinking and I sadly declined. He was sorry to hear I pass on the "vices" of alcohol and meat and said no one could do so on all three, but it was unadvisable to do so on even on :)
Notice also the "god-like" glow of the night-time shot. They'll just sit out here at night and watch the pool all night like a television. Well, healthier at least, you gotta give them that!

Notice also the "god-like" glow of the night-time shot. They'll just sit out here at night and watch the pool all night like a television. Well, healthier at least, you gotta give them that!
Go West!
It’s been a rainy day in the small town of Humpolec. I am getting packed and ready for a big travel day to Mennigem, a small town outside of Munich where my friend Cathrin lives. We were friends at Willamette University in Oregon when she was a German TA there for a year, and haven’t seen each other since I graduated.
This is a picture of David at a beautiful castle in Telc...
I’ll stay for just a short while and then get to the Swiss Vipassana center to serve a ten day course— this will be very nice :). It’s amazing how distracted and noisy the mind gets in the world, and how limited modern society understands, let alone tries to care for it. It’s like when it gets too noisy and wild we try to drown it out with yet greater noise and wilder distractions, and trying to push it down we give it so much more strength. Such madness! May true wisdom arise everywhere…
And here's a shot of David's children deciding to pack it in...
This is a picture of David at a beautiful castle in Telc...

I’ll stay for just a short while and then get to the Swiss Vipassana center to serve a ten day course— this will be very nice :). It’s amazing how distracted and noisy the mind gets in the world, and how limited modern society understands, let alone tries to care for it. It’s like when it gets too noisy and wild we try to drown it out with yet greater noise and wilder distractions, and trying to push it down we give it so much more strength. Such madness! May true wisdom arise everywhere…
And here's a shot of David's children deciding to pack it in...

Wednesday, June 29, 2005
Kickin' It in the Czech Countryside
It’s been a relaxing few days with David. He has taken some time off work to show me some of the nearby sights, which are by far the most beautiful and least touristy (imagine that combination!) I’ve seen yet. I visited the cottages of some of his friends who were influenced by Thoreau’s WALDEN POND, and went to swim in a rain-water pond formed out of an abandoned marble quarry. When he’s gone away to work, I am vastly entertained by watching his rather rotund middle-aged neighbor walking around his yard in tight Speedos. (For SIT people I have to say in all seriousness that the slideshow photos of that Russian man actually make a lot more sense now!) He has a pool that must be about 8 feet by about five feet in width, and according to David, talks about it incessantly. Every day he checks the temperature and duly reports it to David, and shockingly enough, keeps up this routine (along with the wardrobe of gray underwear-only) even in the coldest months where temperature drops to -5 degrees C. One day I saw him entertain houseguests, another, supervise the placement of some bricks. You can almost see the love this man has for his pool, a shame he never goes in it. (a note—from my forays into the Czech countryside, wandering around one’s neighborhood in only underpants is, I must say, quite accepted. But it still makes it no less funny…)
I’ve spent a little bit of time walking around. Turn right on the nearby road and you get to town, a neat sprawling little place (though a population of 10,000) complete with old buildings and churches and archways and courtyards and squares and all the other things that I still haven’t been in Europe long enough to not notice and enjoy. Turn left on the road and you get into nature. I walked past a pond, equestrian stadium, farm, and up a hill that lead into a path taking you deep into a Bohemian forest. Somehow you can just feel all those fairy tales taking birth in places like this. You just expect to run into Hansel, Gretel, or the wolf in Grandmother’s clothes. There is an old castle ruins from the 12th Century I walked around as well, not having to work hard to let the imagination go. I also took a ride out to a site even more in the countryside where David has purchased the land and is planning to build a house there, very beautiful.

Oh, the bottom pictures here are of the pond at sunset, and on my walk through the forest...
I’ve spent a little bit of time walking around. Turn right on the nearby road and you get to town, a neat sprawling little place (though a population of 10,000) complete with old buildings and churches and archways and courtyards and squares and all the other things that I still haven’t been in Europe long enough to not notice and enjoy. Turn left on the road and you get into nature. I walked past a pond, equestrian stadium, farm, and up a hill that lead into a path taking you deep into a Bohemian forest. Somehow you can just feel all those fairy tales taking birth in places like this. You just expect to run into Hansel, Gretel, or the wolf in Grandmother’s clothes. There is an old castle ruins from the 12th Century I walked around as well, not having to work hard to let the imagination go. I also took a ride out to a site even more in the countryside where David has purchased the land and is planning to build a house there, very beautiful.


Tuesday, June 28, 2005
Czech curiousity
One of the fun things about going to any country is reading up on its history, current politics, some key language terms, and of course culture and anthropology (one of the very funny things is that yes is ano and no is ne—and of course in Japanese, ano ne means something like ummm or geeeez…). My family had a bit more time on their hands than I did prior to coming here, and they digested a steady stream of books and movies. One of the more interesting things I’ve found out here is how connected Czech is to Western Europe. Many of its castles—zameks at least—were founded by French barons fleeing the French Revolution. In many ways it seemed like an accident in history that such a country would end up east of the wall and thus be associated as belonging to Eastern Europe. I mentioned this to a Czech friend steeped in history and he agreed, saying it was the decision of a few very high-level administrators sitting around a table after WWII.
I’ve heard so many fascinating stories about the changes the country went through under the Communist years and then again coming out from them, and it’s tempting to write them all. My friends say they really had no conception what existed just west of their borders outside of the occasionally smuggled magazine or reverse-James Bond films. Not even any juice! But as hard as the times were, they also describe a society where unemployment, poverty, and homelessness, among other things, flat out didn’t exist. In everything I have seen in my lifetime, I realized that this is totally inconceivable to me. They described the poet and future president Vaclav Havel shoveling coal and one woman’s father, a doctor, being assigned far from his home. They were laughing as they said this, and I asked if they meant this as a positive thing or negative—“it just was the way it was,” they said. Such a different world before 1989…! We can’t even imagine now. Another time I happened to mention to a friend that it seemed I’d been seeing so many babies around Prague. He said it was funny, because this was actually at an all time low. I asked why, and he said it is kind of like a thing which must be fitted in with the modern life—with two parents having a career, needing to make enough money, etc., and the more kids, the harder it is to support. While before, their lives were pretty much set, and the bigger the family, the more support the kids would offer. Not only were families having less children and doing so at older ages, many were simply never becoming parents. It was kind of sad to hear about the kind of sacrifices as the society moves into “modernity”…
Just the other day David was telling me about a very traditional way a family would kill a pig at a special holiday, by slowly slitting its throat and stirring its blood for soup. They carefully took out the intestines and washed them in a special laundry machine the grandmother had for this purpose only. They then cut the organs into very tiny pieces and separated the fat, then put these small meat pieces back in the intestines and fried and cooked them. Today no one has time to do this, so they just buy pork from the big grocery store in town. Don’t know exactly how I feel about all this as one who abstains from meat, but interesting nonetheless.
I’ve heard so many fascinating stories about the changes the country went through under the Communist years and then again coming out from them, and it’s tempting to write them all. My friends say they really had no conception what existed just west of their borders outside of the occasionally smuggled magazine or reverse-James Bond films. Not even any juice! But as hard as the times were, they also describe a society where unemployment, poverty, and homelessness, among other things, flat out didn’t exist. In everything I have seen in my lifetime, I realized that this is totally inconceivable to me. They described the poet and future president Vaclav Havel shoveling coal and one woman’s father, a doctor, being assigned far from his home. They were laughing as they said this, and I asked if they meant this as a positive thing or negative—“it just was the way it was,” they said. Such a different world before 1989…! We can’t even imagine now. Another time I happened to mention to a friend that it seemed I’d been seeing so many babies around Prague. He said it was funny, because this was actually at an all time low. I asked why, and he said it is kind of like a thing which must be fitted in with the modern life—with two parents having a career, needing to make enough money, etc., and the more kids, the harder it is to support. While before, their lives were pretty much set, and the bigger the family, the more support the kids would offer. Not only were families having less children and doing so at older ages, many were simply never becoming parents. It was kind of sad to hear about the kind of sacrifices as the society moves into “modernity”…
Just the other day David was telling me about a very traditional way a family would kill a pig at a special holiday, by slowly slitting its throat and stirring its blood for soup. They carefully took out the intestines and washed them in a special laundry machine the grandmother had for this purpose only. They then cut the organs into very tiny pieces and separated the fat, then put these small meat pieces back in the intestines and fried and cooked them. Today no one has time to do this, so they just buy pork from the big grocery store in town. Don’t know exactly how I feel about all this as one who abstains from meat, but interesting nonetheless.
Transition....
We spent the next two days in a city that greeted us with scorching humid weather and loads of tourists, visiting the Jewish Quarter and seeking out last souvenirs. We took a walk to a local park that featured the largest equestrian statue in the world, a stunning behemoth example of Soviet realism using the traditional Czech hero Zizkov to apply in its own glorification of peasantry. Then I left for the train station and took a very scenic (and noisy) ride south to Humpolec, to visit my friend David Festa, while my family prepared to leave the following day. David lives with his wife and two young sons who I communicate to in a jumbled mess of English, Czech, tickling, and incomprehensible sounds, and even have them repeating some Japanese words from time to time such as “konnichiwa” and “genki”, though they really need some work with “sayonara.” Maybe minimal pairs, or…
David lives in a house built by his grandparents, who both live downstairs, and his parents live around the corner, so it is an area rich in Festas, or as they say in Czech, Festoves (the plural name form has a different ending, as does the female—for example, newspapers refer to Sharon Stoneova or Julia Robertsova). I have been eating some great food here the past couple days! I’ll be here through the week and then will visit my friend Cathrin who lives outside of Munich. I’ll then serve a ten day Vipassana meditation course in Switzerland and sit a Satipattana course in Italy before returning home via England.

Poland
We boarded the train at 11 am and then arrived in Oswecim (the Polish name for Auschwitz) about 8 pm. We had a neat train compartment that conjured up images of European train travel, and had a neat European train delay for about an hour. A young Czech man traveling in our compartment was headed to his hometown Ostrava, and told us this almost never happened with Czech trains, but the one ahead of ours was delayed as well. I figured it was a good time to go back to that classic in Czech literature, Hrabal’s Closely Watched Trains. I missed the drug-sniffing Polish dogs because I was fighting sleep while listening to Goenkaji’s chanting on my walkman, but later opened my eyes to see an entirely different countryside passing before us. It was more industrial and somehow something about it looked poorer as well. At our transfer in Katowice, we found out that Poland had their version of the heselbaba as well, and not having any Polish slotzy or even grotzy I was turned away with a pleasant shrug of the shoulders (we were quite pleased by the Polish service industry, as it turned out). So I ventured outside and used the facilities at KFC, in a state of awe at how different this place across the border was. People, their clothes, the buildings and streets, and just overall energy made it clear that this was a totally different culture. We found our hotel, named the HOTEL GLOB with the image of a globe beside it, just a few steps from the train station, and ventured to the nearby Restaurant Skorpian to seek out veggie cuisine yet again.
The next day we walked along the street to go to the first of three Auschwitz camps. My mom and I had spent our second day in Prague visiting the nearby Terezin concentration camp, and that did much to prepare me for this. In some ways it was more terrifying, because entire parts of
I had been hesitant to coming here, since I knew these vibrations of cruelty and death were developed over several years, and must surely still inhabit the area, and it wasn’t appealing to put myself in such an environment. But once there, I realized one of the predominant
We left in the morning and spent the next day in Krakow, which is just a beautiful city. We walked through the old town, past a large walled castle, and through the fascinating streets of the Jewish Quarter. At one museum a young man estimated there were about 200 Jews in Krakow today, and a couple thousand in the entire country. Enjoying our last few sips of the wonderful Polish gazawana, we spent our remaining change and boarded the night train back to Prague at 11 pm. I had six to seven solid hours of train sleep, minus a few minutes of being woken in the early morning hours at the border crossing, and we arrived in Prague at 7 am.
The Road to the North

Wasting no time, the next day we went with Misha and her Russian boyfriend Sergei to rent two cars. We certainly weren’t going to sneak up on anyone, because the cars were an identical color of bright blue with large advertising all over the vehicle giving the web address of the company and the rental rates. We were all happy to soon find ourselves in a lush green countryside, and passing by gigantic fields of corn, barley, and other crops. Our first stop was in the small town of Zelezny Brod, where my mom had a special appointment to tour a small glass bead factory. She goes wild for beads, and northern Czech lands are world-famous for the beads they produce, so it was a good match. We enjoyed walking through the town and admiring its old church on a hill, and then found a restaurant to see the different ways they could fry cheese and cook potatoes. We also enjoyed a small museum that showed old Czech scenes, and which reminded us in many ways of Puritan America. Later in the day we found a great hotel in Male Strana (Little Rock) that looked to be a peaceful and quiet stay until the German invasion. They first secured the outside balcony, then challenged our desire to sleep with loud talking and drumming well into the night, and later carried away the morning breakfast buffet.
Thus fortified with a vegetable plate and sugar water, we went to see two castles before returning to Prague. The first, I later found out, was called a Hrad, which refers to a medieval fortress, and the second, a Zamek, is more like the large mansions that came about around the time of the Renaissance. The first was really impressive. It was perched on a hill and had a very high tower (with a precarious narrow stairway) that gave views of the entire valley—perfect for spotting oncoming invaders. The second was interesting but didn’t seem to feed into that whole Lord of the Rings imagination. And after about half the tour, as we were pointed out larger-than-life portraits and leather-engraved walls, you just start thinking about at whose expense caused this monolith to be created. So, maybe there’ll be guided tours through the Bush family home after this era has passed… J
Our next day in Prague was an exhausting one, our trip having caught up with us. We did some more sightseeing and Jeff planned to leave the next day to relocate from LA to Atlanta, while the rest of us prepared for Poland, and Misha invited us to a very nice garden party with a fresh vegetarian spread that didn’t include cheese or potatoes!
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