Who says that you have to choose between a night out and writing? |
On Friday night, just as
the sun was going down after an abnormally bright Brussels day, I cut up a
baguette in a kitchen with three other women. I had on a dress that I had
purchased in a shop along the main square in Gibraltar. We were talking about
cooking, kitchens, the way our mothers prepared meals. I looked over at A, who
is almost always on her way to or just finishing with another smile, who at
that particular moment was glowering down at the hand mixer that was refusing
to work as she made homemade Mascarpone for this going away party. L deftly
held a knife and taught me how to peel oranges in the Spanish fashion as we
assembled a fruit salad. R was already through with the entire bunch of bananas
and arranging nearly 40 Euros worth of cheese, which I couldn’t wait to consume
after I had finished doing L’s hair.
No matter where you are,
there is nothing like being in a kitchen with a group of laughing women in the
hour before a party. Especially a farewell party where you can already feel the
loneliness of living very far from people that you’ve come to love.
Farewell Party |
But that has been the feel
of things since Wednesday when I finished typing the final words of this first
draft of my manuscript.
It feels like the last few
weeks before graduation. When everything takes on the sheen of anticipated
nostalgia; the way my heels tangle with the cobblestone, the throaty,
whole-mouth sound of French down the bar from me, the snap of the market tents
folding up in the afternoon, the grassy dry taste of a cider served in a
champagne glass. All of it now marked by the ticking clocked I’ve abandoned
wearing.
View from the Party |
In five months, I have
visited eight countries, enough so that the TravBuddy widget tells me that I
have now seen 9% of the world. I have written about 80,000 words of a strange work
of fiction, more than 100,000 words of journal entries, I shudder to think how
many pounds I’ve put on, so we’ll leave that number out of it for now. And then
we can reflect on how inadequate those numbers are. On how there is no measure
for the feel of a dress flapping in Mediterranean wind under Mediterranean sun
or what the rain sounds like while writing on the top floor of a four story
apartment in the south of England.
I have liked (or let’s not
be coy here, I’ve loved) the cities and people that I’ve met over the course of
this journey intensely, and each of them in their own fashion, caressing quirks
and failings in particular – because somehow these are the things that make me
love something. I’ve loved them as a tourist loves anything – with a wet, eager
wonder at the newness, sometimes pleasantly daunted by the strangeness. And
I’ve also loved myself a little more, maybe hated myself, too.
? |
Take, for instance, the
day I sat in front of the computer to work on my book and composed, instead, self-applauding emails to you all day talking about how well it was all going
in order to make it true. Take the day I vomited in the middle of a
French-speaking grocery store in front of some very kind and bewildered
Belgians (yeah, ask me about that story sometime). Take, for example, that
comatose day I stalled out on Chapter 8 while I considered the sudden death of
my friend (very far away) and the range of beautiful work that he left behind
because he put paint to canvas with such dedication.
Central Station Farewells |
Not every day is the day
you’re following your dream, sometimes you’re a graceless house guest, a
washed-up tourist, or a talentless hack faking it in order to survive the
afternoon. And if I wrote you an email on one of those days and told you how
beautiful everything was, how good I felt, how the book was progressing, perhaps including an Oscar Wilde quote as though I were worthy of sharing an industry with him,
it wasn’t exactly untrue, but it might not have been what you were picturing.
I’ve fabricated a few things for you from time to time in order to to make them true for myself and in order to make it through the final pages. Which I have now.
But I swear that every
day, even the days that I failed were the best days of my life because I had
something to live up to even if it was just the view of the stately illuminated spire of
the Grand Place here in a city that has become my home: Brussels.
Promotional Art Car Instrument... Thing |
Yesterday afternoon,
before putting my friend John on a train back to Paris, a group of us toured
through two museums, intermittently punctuated with about five different café
stops. Along the way, there were two artfully wounded cars that were smoking,
painted, and dilapidated and rigged to make music when you interacted with
them. There were oblique references to some parade that will take place later
this week after I’m gone, but the connection that these musical wrecked cars
have to it is unclear. But people, including us, were still stopping to watch
and play the cars without the need for an invitation or explanation.
These are the things that
make me smile as L and A set to rehearsing some sort of spontaneous and
makeshift song on the car and I sigh to myself, “Ah, Belgium.”
Brussels (Belgium on the
whole, really) in spite of the important role that it plays on the continent,
despite its history and personality will never be a destination European city.
People end up in Brussels mostly and it makes a case for itself and you either
embrace it or you move on. Brussels offers itself, nothing more.
12th Century Belgian Painting that proves Gay Pride Celebrations have long been the norm |
Think about it: Rome,
London, Paris. These cities need not introduce themselves, their presence is
anticipated, felt, announced on every corner, their personality is well-known
from the get-go – they offer you an idea and they are delivered to you. Brussels, on the other hand is
another thing entirely – as an international melting pot without an inherited
definition – a young country even by American standards (whose independence was
not recognized until 1839) – Belgium simply shows up and is itself, and gives you
the strangest hidden corners, both new and old, at odds with itself, and very,
very quirky. You don’t expect anything from Belgium, you discover it and
because it didn’t arrive with a preconceived notion attached to it, your time
with it can be entirely yours, something you make for yourself from a buffet of
Belgian artifacts.
Beer, chocolate, fries,
mussels, lace and comic books. These are the traditional Belgian
associations. Godiva chocolate, the Smurfs, even some of our finest diamonds - these high and low delights emerged from gray, complicated cities.
Brussels Basilica of the Sacred Heart |
Which is something that I
love about it: its delight and its sincerity, its lack of
perceived notions, association, or affectation. You have to want what Brussels
has to offer to love it, which is a strange assortment of personal collisions:
the butcher that chased my friend down the street when he forgot his wallet,
the Belgian punks spilling beer on themselves, threatening to piss on the Metro
and then holding the door open for an old woman, an impassioned defense from
any citizen on the ninth art: comic books (reminding you of the indignation of
incredibly gifted and fit girls who would knock you out were you to suggest that cheerleading isn’t a sport – of course it is). But it’s also the strange
Atomium on the skyline (built for the World’s Fair in 1958), the smoking car
band promotions on the street, the green art deco Basilica (which my friend L
remarked was such a strange, sci-fi stylized church, it looked as though Star
Wars fans or Rocky Horror Picture enthusiasts might be more comfortable holding
conventions there than the world’s Catholic faithful who might come here to
marvel at one of the ten largest Catholic edifices in the world), it’s the
sun-glassed young Green who’s shouting poetry in French and Dutch during Brussels' Gay Pride celebration, it’s the old couple at the local market that stops to
listen to the live brass band interpretation of David Bowie’s “Heroes.” It doesn’t
make sense, and it isn’t always sophisticated – but it might just offer you
more than you expected. It is allowed to be unusual, to contradict and redefine itself. Which is its problem. And its grace. And sort of the challenge for everyone I know.
Or maybe I’m just coming
to the end of things. Maybe I’m just observant in that acute way that you’re
only capable of when you’re in grief or joy.
Random Statue on the Way to the Basilica |
I like Brussels, because
it reminds me of me: unassuming, awkward, a little weird, a fusion of all of
the best of the people that it has met, sometimes gloomy, but overall on the
verge of laughter at all times. You have to get to know it to like it and it offers you what
you weren’t looking for instead of what you expected to find.
Which is a trend that I
think will continue in the coming months.
And, if social media is
the new platform for life updates and if blogs are the accepted channel for
personal press releases, I should say now that when I return to the states that
I am not staying in Seattle. I’ve been offered a position in San Francisco, which I am taking and I will be moving there in mid-July.
I’m thirty, I wrote a
strange book, I have a suitcase full of chocolate and shoes and beyond that,
nothing is really certain.
Which means that things
remain to be discovered and the boundaries of self-discovery are really only restricted
to the borders of your heart, which, if you want it to, takes in quite a lot of
territory.
The farewell party thrown
by my friends on Friday night was a small affair by some standards, but it had
all of the earmarks of a good time – an overflowing food table, dancing, an
array of Belgian beers, and a great view. And so maybe the moment you leave home for another city is a
bigger departure than you had anticipated and maybe all love and all travel are
just a series of cycling greetings and farewells, but it’s worth the hardships
if it means you end up raising a glass with your favorite French family or
dancing to Adele at three in the morning while overlooking the city skyline
with your friends.
And so this is what it
feels like to finish a book and come home.
Damn. Tears. "Which means that things remain to be discovered and the boundaries of self-discovery are really only restricted to the borders of your heart, which, if you want it to, takes in quite a lot of territory." :-)
ReplyDeleteLove you, Kirsten. Thanks for reading along with my adventure. I can't wait to read along with yours.
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