Journal of a Sabbatical |
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April 28, 2001 |
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freedom and nostalgia |
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Today's Reading: Budapest 1900 by John Lukacs Plum Island Bird List |
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One of the things I like best about being in Budapest is being able to walk places. It reminds me of growing up in the 1950's in the Boston suburbs where I could walk to the corner store, the library, church, school, the ballfield, the swimming pool. Had to take the MTA (that's called the T now) to Crystal Lake to swim in lake water, but the swimming pool was within walking distance. I remember the first time I visited the West Coast relatives and found out they had to get a ride to the nearest corner store for a slurpee. I was amazed. I couldn't imagine not having the freedom to go there on my own. I continue to be amazed that my nieces have to be driven to soccer and the library and scouts and CCD etc. There are no sidewalks in their town. Everything is far apart. Once we were taking a walk, you know , just to go for a walk, and a cop stopped us to make sure we were alright. Times have changed. But here in Budapest, everybody walks. There are shops and markets and trams all over the place. I feel mobile like I did when I was a kid. The one impediment to my freedom here is Mrs. Entomologist, who seems to think that not speaking Hungarian renders me incapable of buying a train ticket, finding the train, changing trains, getting off at the right stop... Heck, I've changed trains in the remoter parts of Hokkaido without any trouble, and it's even harder to read Japanese than Hungarian! So she insisted on taking me to the train station, helping me buy the ticket (which was actually useful), putting me on the train, and instructing the conductor to make sure I got off at the right stop. The conductor seemed to think this was a little overprotective. I got a first class ticket (I told Mrs. Entomologist that my brother would pay for it so she would stop worrying about whether I could afford it - it's not that expensive by American standards) with an assigned seat so traveled in luxurious comfort from Budapest to Dombovar (the fast train from Dombovar to Kaposvar doesn't have classes and is really crowded). It really made me wonder why we are so willing to be seriously uncomfortable if not in downright pain to travel by air and get there sooner. Wouldn't we all feel a lot better if we slowed down and traveled by train? Of course, the airlines could make the seats in coach bigger and farther apart and not keep the darn fasten seatbelt sign on for the whole flight ... Anyway, I could get really into traveling by train. It's so much more human-scaled.
It was fantastic to have so much time to visit with BiB, to see his office, his apartment, all the major parts of his work place complete with maps showing the major truck routes, which reminded me of the elaborate highway systems we used to design in the dust in our backyard for the Tonka Trucks -- somehow the slogan "Attention boys, Tonka Toys are made just for you" never stopped me. We laid out yards and yards of broad highways with cloverleafs using a broom to mark them out in the dust. So somehow I expected big trucks and was disappointed when he showed me the motor pool with all its vans and SUV type vehicles. One of his coworkers suggested he take me to the maintenance garage for the big trucks, and sure enough there they were. There was the most enormous yellow Volvo truck I have ever seen. I would need an elevator to get into the cab. Very cool.
[There are pictures to go with this, but there is still a floppy stuck in the drive.] [May 3: floppy drive unstuck. Pictures from top to bottom: Me at the Kapsovar train station, BiB at his favorite restaurant where we ate lunch, BiB on the balcony of his apartment.] |
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Copyright © 2001, Janet I. Egan |