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I have been trying to decide what this travel blog should be about, and have come to realize that that is like trying to decide what I would like my entire experience abroad to be about. There are many new things I could focus on, like the differences between the United States and Russia, the legacies of its history, school, language… The list goes on. But there is one thing in which I have always been interested, and that is what is known as the "enigmatic Russian soul" (seriously, stay with me- I swear the pretentious part is almost over. I promise this is a real thing that Russians themselves believe). Something about the Russian people is so very unique that they have been given this title. I never really believed in the existence of the enigmatic Russian soul- I always thought- they are no different than any other country of people… But as I sit here at 8:00 in the morning in the dark (the sun will be fully up in a little over two hours) in a beautiful old apartment that has high ceilings, wood floors, big(ish) rooms and a view of the Hermitage, St. Isaac's Cathedral and Peter and Paul Fortress that kept me speechless for about ten minutes- I do believe that there is something unique about this place.
The people here have
something to offer that no one else in the world has. Whether it is my host
mother, Larisa Sergeevna, her very best friend, Larisa, or her extremely ugly
dog, Fabian (he's a Chinese Crested)- there is something secret that these
people know. A communal secret that they all keep behind a slight smirk on
their face after you say something they can't understand, don't agree with or
generally just think you are being a silly girl. They know something about what
you will face and always seem to be waiting to judge how you will handle it.
Maybe it will be a little babushka on the subway yelling at you on the metro or
a mashrootka driver that refuses to give you change, they know you will have to
face these things and they are waiting to decide what to do with you.
I have been trying to decide what this travel blog should be about, and have come to realize that that is like trying to decide what I would like my entire experience abroad to be about. There are many new things I could focus on, like the differences between the United States and Russia, the legacies of its history, school, language… The list goes on. But there is one thing in which I have always been interested, and that is what is known as the "enigmatic Russian soul" (seriously, stay with me- I swear the pretentious part is almost over. I promise this is a real thing that Russians themselves believe). Something about the Russian people is so very unique that they have been given this title. I never really believed in the existence of the enigmatic Russian soul- I always thought- they are no different than any other country of people… But as I sit here at 8:00 in the morning in the dark (the sun will be fully up in a little over two hours) in a beautiful old apartment that has high ceilings, wood floors, big(ish) rooms and a view of the Hermitage, St. Isaac's Cathedral and Peter and Paul Fortress that kept me speechless for about ten minutes- I do believe that there is something unique about this place.
| The view out my window at sunrise (~10:00 am) |
On
my flight from Frankfurt to St. Petersburg, I was seated next to a very well
dressed Russian man. Everyone else in my program was sitting next to another
student, but here I was, as only I know how to be, sitting next to a young
Russian man. So of course we started to talk and he kept that little judgmental-
"I know something you don’t know" smirk on his face the entire three
hour flight. I noticed this smirk but have seen it before and so thought
nothing of it as I carefully discussed things like Putin and Pussy Riot without
giving too much of my opinion away. He seemed entertained by my cautious
approach to the conversation, and generally found something about the situation
funny. Russians act as though all foreigners tickle them in some way, and I
have a strange urge to act in a way that makes them stop. After the flight we
landed in gray, snowy St. Petersburg and proceeded to spend two and a half days
in a hotel, cooling our heels and listening to orientation lectures. Overall,
these were only good for making friends and realizing that some things you
simply have to shrug and say, "well that's Russia". The important
part is to know what is simply "Russia" and what isn't. One of the
first things we were told about was the existence of the "metro
face", which is the face you use when sitting on the metro so that no one
talks to you. Americans have a weird habit of smiling to themselves or other
people in public places, but that is a sure way to get robbed, hit on, or both
in Russia. It is an almost neutral expression with a hint of menace. I have yet
to perfect my metro face, because I either start laughing or look like I'm
going to murder you. I'm trying to find a neutral medium.
Saturday
we went on a bus tour and visited our school which is breathtaking. Around 4:00
our host parents came to pick us up, which was rather terrifying. 86 students
sitting in a room waiting for their name to be called as we all watch as one by
one, we wonder if we'll ever see them again and wonder why we are still sitting
here. It was a very nerve racking experience overall. Finally you leave and get
into the taxi and watch as wonderful and horrible buildings pass by you, wondering
which one will be yours until finally you are there. Larisa Sergeevna lives on
Vasilievsky Ostrov (island), which is the island across the Neva river to the
west. It is a very old building about one block away from the light pink church
in which Catherine II married Peter III many years ago (I'm pretty sure that's what Larisa Sergeevna's friend Larisa told me but it was in Russian and I was very tired and trying to translate at the same time...).
Right next door is the
apartment in which President Putin lived when he was little. There is more
history on this one block than there is in my whole city. We went for a walk in
the bitter cold with her friend, Larisa and her study abroad student, Bianca
from California. Bianca's Larisa speaks some English, though mine does not,
which is a good thing because Bianca doesn't speak any Russian and I don't want
to speak any English. The walk was very cold but good to see what all is near
us. We have a gorgeous walking street with tons of restaurants, bars and coffee
shops about five minutes away, along with a very nearby metro stop.
| The Church in which Catherine the Great married Peter the III, 2 minutes from my apartment. |
After
about a ten minute bus ride Sunday morning we arrived at the Hermitage and I slid
across the snow covered courtyard in my traction-less boots and looked very
Russian with my scarf covering my hair to protect it from the snow. The
building is stunning and blue and big and amazing and the inside reflects that.
Larisa Sergeevna is not a fan of how extravagant it is and says there is too
much gold everywhere and is too dorogo
which has a few translations but can mean fancy, expensive, elaborate, etc. I
think that since I have been to so many Western European cathedrals, museums
and chateaus I am "used" to the extravagance and no longer think of
it as gaudy but how a museum is supposed to look. My friend Anya and I were
very excited to be in the ballroom of the Winter Palace because Anastasia's
Romanov family had been there so we waltzed like Meg Ryan did in the movie
together. These public displays are frowned upon by Russians, but since no one
did more than frown we decided we were ok. We saw two paintings by da Vinci, a
few Rembrandts and a Michelangelo, along with hundreds of other amazing pieces,
including the really cool peacock clock from Catherine the Great's secret
husband, Potemkin. The Hermitage is second in size only to the Louvre, and it
would have taken far longer than the hour and a half tour we had to see and
appreciate everything, but since it was only the fourth day in the city I think
I can live with that.
| The Michelangelo at the Hermitage- The Crouching Boy |
Tomorrow
we have our first day of school, and placement tests which means that the
Russian that I haven't studied since finals in December is about to have holes
poked in it to see where it's weakest. I told Larisa Sergeevna how nervous I
was but she said not to worry because her last American girl was in the
intermediate class and she was far less understandable than I am. She says I speak pravilno, which simply means correctly,
and that I have no accent. That's all good news but I am still nervous. I'll go
to school in the dark tomorrow, but I hope I won't come home in the dark too.
More ramblings later. For now I must catch up on sleep and think about
studying. Or both. We shall see what is to come.
Czechs have "Metro Face" too. I remember the program advisers giving us a similar warning!
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