The Polish president will veto two of the three controversial laws, the laws that would have finally buried Polish democracy. Wow, I am shocked! This is a very quick and emotional post. I am just leaving for a spa in few minutes, no time for writing and even no time for thinking. It makes me happy though. Can I trust this verdict? We'll see, but my choice for now is to feel positive about the event.
Monday, 24 July 2017
Time to shake off the blues
Frankly, I cannot
see any changes in the circumstances I was bothered by, the other day writing
my previous post. So, I thought that I ask my stoic bible for advice. I do not
like this feeling of sadness and lack of control and I want to change it. Will
it work? I hope so.
Mark Aurelius
said that we do not have to give in to negative feelings like sadness or
frustration. We may not have influence over the circumstances, but we have influence
over our feelings and reactions. OK, I know the theory and I agree with it, but
to make this necessary change is rather difficult. But if I do not make the
necessary change in my mood, I am told that I am not true to myself, that I do
not use the opportunities that are just at the stretch of the hand. That I
waste opportunity to live better. Hmm…
Another thought,
this time Seneca is the author of the wisdom, is that a wise person must not wait
for the external bad circumstances to be resolved before the happy life can be
lived. It is shameful to wait with
leading a happy and full life till whatever is bad at the moment passes or gets
resolved. It is silly to expect that there will come the moment when everything
is perfect and then we can spread our wings. This will never happen and we would
waste our life waiting in vain for a perfect situation.
This is the
theory, I intend to apply to my day and practice it. Will I manage? Maybe?? I
feel a little better already.
Friday, 21 July 2017
Things look a little bleak
I have not been posting for a while and this is not because I do not have time to write. I have not been in the best of spirits, and this is quite an understatement. There a number of reasons for it. The weather is not uplifting to say the least. This has had impact on my mood and my well-being. Generally speaking, I do not feel well.
The political situation in the country is very depressing and there is no hope for a change. Polish government is doing its best to upset the EU and force Brussels to impose penalties on Poland. This most likely will eventually lead to Poland either being expelled or leaving the Union on its own accord claiming that it does not intend to be ruled by foreign powers. Political events are moving like a tsunami changing the old democratic order dramatically. As of yesterday, there is no independent jurisdiction. Today, we all woke up in a new reality. Sad, very sad. I can imagine the consequences of the current event and it looks very bleak to me. The people protests are massive and very moving, but in my opinion futile.
The Chain of Light protests outside the Courthouse in Warsaw. The light represents respect and sadness for outgoing democratic rules and hope for the future |
This is rather marginal and inconsequential, but few days ago the visit of Mr Trump in Poland was another reason to feel depressed. The visit was considered by some a great success, everything worked very well and the presidents of both countries were happy with the outcome. Mr. Trump laid superlatives towards Poland and Polish history so thick that it was too superficial even for American standards. Of course, he did not mean any of what he was saying and most likely even did not understand it. The sad thing about it is, that Polish crowds were lapping it up, cheering enthusiastically thinking that Poland and its history are eventually appreciated and understood. As the country is falling down some see it as uplifting future. I want to be the one who is wrong. How much I would like to be the one to be in the wrong!
While I have no influence on weather and politics and not that much on my health situation, I have all the control over that I read. And here, I made a wrong choice some ten days ago. For an while, if not for always, I read books to find answers to the questions: What is it all about? How to live well? The most uplifting books I have found so far are books based stoic philosophy. This time I chose The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco. Bad choice. Not that the book is bad, far from it, but it is so dark in its mood and conclusions that it will take some effort to shake all the negativity off.
I do not intend to write about the content of the book this time, but I would like to write about the reason why I decided to read it. It was a fashionable book some years ago, but it somehow did not appeal to me then. Medieval times did not turn me on, they are still not my favourite times in history. I see too many frightening similarities between those times and some aspects of the current days. As I perhaps mentioned earlier, books in Poland are published with much more care than their equivalents in other countries. I found this beautiful book in one of the many books stores in Gdansk and I could not resist buying it. The next step was to read it. The first 100 “boring” pages were intended by the author to check out the reader and his intention to go beyond the crime story that the book is known for. I passed the test and got sucked into the gloom and doom, cruelty, fanaticism, falseness of religious intentions and all that negative stuff. Mea Culpa! and my depression.
There is a Polish radio program where they always ask participants two questions: what is good and what is bad in the current situation. I have answered the second question comprehensively, the first one is a bit trickier today, but I have an answer! The conversion rate from Aussie dollars to Polish zloty improved in my favour!
Sunday, 2 July 2017
What Poles Drink Today
Poles always had reputation of being excessive drinkers. I
agree that there was a lot of over drinking especially among people with
insufficient financial means and education. One could often see in the morning “yesterday’s
men” struggling from one lamp post to the next. Perhaps the last night they
were drowning their sorrows or celebrating some occasion. I sometimes think
that they drunk that much to forget the reality too difficult to cope with when
sober? Difficult to say. Maybe the climate? Maybe the Slavic soul?
I just finished the fifth part of Knausgard’s My Struggle.
This is a material for another post perhaps, but for now I just wanted to write
about Scandinavian drinking or rather over drinking. Young Karl Ove, the author,
in his twenties, is almost permanently drunk and so are his friends and
colleagues. In drunken fits, they behave in a way that so called civilised
society would definitely disapprove of. They are all educated and sensitive
people without any real financial problems. Their protective government takes
care of that. And they drink, it seems, more than proverbial Pole. Existential
angst? Climate? Youth? I am defending the reputation of Poles a bit and perhaps
quite unnecessarily, especially that this is not what I want to write about
this time. Anyhow, for the last few
years I have not seen in Poland a man with a visible hangover. Maybe the drinking
problem is solved or maybe drinking moved into homes and now in invisible.
Being curious (maybe not exactly insatiably, but curious nevertheless)
I started to wonder what Poles drink those days.
I observed that they drink more wine and with a better understanding
of the pleasure wine may bring. I still have some problems with being served
white wine that is too warm for me or any wine that is not really dry. I may be
served semi-dry wine because I am a woman and “ladies prefer more delicate
taste”? Still, the wine culture is
already here and there are many real wine connoisseurs around.
There are specialised shops selling alcohol, but any small supermarket
or even a little corner shop typically is licenced and has a comprehensive selection
of wine, bear, vodka, whisky etc.
Loyalty cards are quite popular here so I have my Polish
selection of such cards. There is a wine shop card among them. I noticed that
sales people in Poland are typically more knowledgeable in relation to what
they sell than their Aussie counterparts, so I started to ask for advice and opinion
quite often. Doing some alcohol shopping in my friendly wine shop, I engaged
into a little discussion with the salesman. He told me some interesting stories
about wine making in certain regions and at some stage I have asked him the
question “what people drink in Poland those days and what is really in fashion”.
The answer came immediately and without hesitation: PROSECCO and PRIMITIVO. Both
Italian wines, hmm… This is in Poland loving France and French since forever…
This explained why Aperol Spritz is on the menu of two little
restaurants around the corner. I must say that I live in a quiet neighbourhood
not known for restaurants. The first day in Gdansk going to the local restaurant
of a suggestive and worrying name Italian
Job I noticed to my surprise Aperol Spritz on the menu. Since one of my
Sydney friends, Karon, tells me and all her Facebook friends, that the day when
she has an Aperol Spritz is a good day, I thought that it would be proper to
make this day good one for me as well. I ordered the drink. After some minutes,
distressed waitress comes to our table saying that they ran out of Aperol, but
tomorrow they will definitely have it. I have not tested it yet, but I might,
even if I doubt the preparation of the
drink will meet my standards. Or rather Karon’s standards that I share.
I also found out from my young Polish friends that whisky
should not be any Johnny Walker or even Jack Daniels thing. It should be a single malt whisky with some serious years
of maturing! Obviously, this is not a
drink to get drunk on as a Pole, unless money is not an object. But even than
one perhaps is not anybody who’s anybody. Times have changed…
So Prosecco, Primitivo and single malt whisky! This is what
Poles drink today.
Sunday, 25 June 2017
Place where a lot has happened
Some
time ago, I have been told that I concentrate too much on the past rather than
living in the NOW. I got a bit defensive about it, but on reflection I think I
may have misunderstood the message and intentions of the person who commented
on my posts. This time I must admit that the past is flooding my thoughts and
feelings. It restricted my actions and
it is time that I do something about it. The Tri-City of Gdansk, Sopot and
Gdynia causes excessive reflections. So much has happened in this place not
only for the Polish modern history but also for me personally. I decided that
writing I about it may help to get it out and forget. Here it goes…
I
have not considered Gdansk to be my home town until quite recently it has
started to change. Before I left Poland for living in other countries, I considered
myself to be a Warsaw girl. I lived in Warsaw for about 15 years and felt at
home there. I only visited the area around Gdansk from time to time. Almost
each visit, however, triggered off some important change in my life. I have not
realised that until quite recently, but the pattern is very clear.
It
was not far from Gdansk that I fell in love for the first time. They are nice
and tender memories confused a bit by the fact that it was me who left the
relationship and not for a good reason. I simply grew out of it. Maybe this is
a good reason enough? The object of my reminiscing lives in Gdansk now. When I
pass his place of business, and I do sometimes, I cannot stop the memories to
come back.
Yesterday,
I walked from Sopot along the beach towards Gdansk. And again, I passed the
place where my life took one of those critical turns. There, I met my future
husband during one summer holiday. It was also the time where I said good bye
to my first love. It was confusing and created a sense of guilt in me. It was
quite an appropriate feeling for I was still a catholic girl and a Polish one
to it. Guilt is speciality of Poles and a Catholicism is based on it. So, I felt bad, but my life at the same time moved
in the new exciting direction and the bliss of the first grownup love followed.
There
is another place in the Long Market in the Old Town of Gdansk, where I learnt
computing languages and this made me a programmer and started my IT career
lasting many, many years. It was the start to my successful professional life.
It is difficult not to pass the place where I studied those languages when I
stroll in the Old Town and then it is difficult not to think about the times
passed. Actually, it was more that studying involved there.
There are two facades but the buildings are internally joined |
The room now looks very much the same as I remember it |
After
some years, life took me away from Poland and Australia became my new home. But
before I moved there, me and the new man in my life spent part of our honey
moon in Sopot staying in the Grand Hotel. It was a grand place, as the name
indicates, but it was a tired grandness, only a memory of grand times. The
communistic rulers did not approve of excesses in comfort and elegance, so the
place was badly kept. It still meant a lot to me to be there. We had a room
with a view. It was not a grand room, definitely not a honey moon suit, but the
windows opened towards the sea. I thought it was fantastic. I remember opening the window and inhaling
the smell, the smell of sea I always found wonderful.
During
my years in Australia I have not though about Gdansk at all and very little
really about Poland. Of course, I knew about Solidarity and Walesa. It was
Gdansk again…
After
years my life went through another turn and I found myself on holidays in
Gdansk. A single person again. With the help of my dear friend I reacquainted my
old admirer. We went through a period of mutual infatuation and since we both
were single it seemed sensible to plan our autumn years together. That is how I
came to live in Gdansk. We shared the memories of our young years, love for
literature and inclination to philosophising. We both loved under-cooked
vegetables which is rather uncommon in Poland. That seemed enough to enter
another relationship. It was not that idyllic
as I had imagined, but there are beautiful memories that come to me very often
when I am in Gdansk. There is a lot of melancholy around it as the man has
passed away.
There
are a lot of good, happy feelings as well as I love my life style when in
Poland. I also find my Gdansk place very comfortable and beautiful. I hope I
will be able to return here for many more years. If I would be asked now what my
Polish home town is , I would definitely answer – GDANSK!
Thursday, 15 June 2017
Corpus Christi
My religious
catholic times are over. This came with the package of noticing discrepancies between
what the church practices and preaches. In addition, I divorced my first
husband and the relationship moved into a true friendship phase. The church however does not
forgive such mistakes and excommunicates poor souls who change their minds as
far as marriage goes. So, I was excommunicated and my old religious practices
had to be stopped.
Living
in Sydney as a non-Catholic I am typically unaware of the church holidays, not
so in Poland. Today is the Corpus Christi day and that involves processions
around each town, and I believe, villages as well. In Gdansk in the several
parts of the town there are local Corpus Christi processions organised by the
church and its more enthusiastic believers. For many years, the street at which
I live has been selected to be on the route of the local procession. Further,
the fence of the house has been especially honoured by erection of one of the
four procession altars that belong to the process. I am respectful of the
proceedings even if it is not my fairy-tale any more.
Yesterday,
I noticed a couple of ladies energetically cleaning up the pavement around the
house. They paid particular attention to crevices between the small granite stones
at the edge of the pavement. I did not connect immediately their activities
with the forthcoming Corpus Christi, but eventually I clicked when they asked
me to keep an eye on potential cars that might want to park next to the altar
that was going to be erected the next day morning. I promised to keep a watch,
hoping nobody will park as I would perhaps not have enough motivation to intervene.
Thankfully, nobody did.
This is the view of one of the main processions in Gdansk. Much more grandiose than my local one.Maybe the next year I will make my way to the Old Town of Gdansk for the occasion? |
This
morning I was waiting for the procession to pass next to my windows and around
11:00 I heard religious singing heralding the event. First a group of regular believers
appeared, followed by church officials dressed in white albs, then little
girls with baskets full of flower petals to be spread in front of the main
priest marching under a canopy carried by four men. At the end about two
hundred believers walked with their heads down showing particular respect. I
liked observing the event, but had to be very discreet about it not to offend
the religious feelings of anyone or trigger off potential aggression of people
who may have not liked to be observed during their religious rituals. While
watching, I prayed a bit in my own non-Catholic way similar to meditation. I
liked the peacefulness coming with the moment.
The
priest read some scriptures, just few meters away from my window where I was
hiding behind a net curtain, then he performed a very short part of a mass and few
minutes later, the whole procession walked away singing again.
To
me, the whole process belongs more to the XIXth century than to the modern
world of the XXIst, but such is Poland. It lives in the past and the future at
the same time. In most of the cases I like it.
Monday, 12 June 2017
Starting my Polish Holiday
Changing
realities is a bit disorientating. I have done it few times in the last two
weeks. I may be using too grandiose term for my situation, but this is how it
felt for a while. Leaving Sydney, I stepped into a “being in the air” bubble. This is how I feel when I travel between
Australia and Europe – I step into a different reality than my usual day to day
life. This is my way to cope with a very long flight.
When
I landed in Warsaw I entered another world. This was the world of my dear
friends who took care of me in the first week in Poland. I was fed five times a
day (much too much by my standards) and I enjoyed the indulgence forced upon
me. I ate plenty of bread and potatoes, food that is very seldom on my menu in
Sydney. This may not sound very special, but it was to me. Sure, there were many other things to choose
from, but they seemed less attractive than the forbidden fruits of fantastic
Polish carbohydrates.
I was socialising 7X24 (or close to it) during
the time in Warsaw. This was another substantial change to my usual life style.
And again, I enjoyed the change very much even if at times it was a bit tiring
(tiring to both sides, I imagine). This seemed to be another reality to me.
A
week later I was on my way to Gdansk, yet another reality. I have been here for
less than one week, but it feels “normal” already. Looks that I got accustomed to
changing environments even if the beginning was quite disorientating. So, I am back in my Gdansk place, the place I
will call home for the next three months. I feel happy here and I intend to
make the best of my stay here and promise myself to stay away from those
tempting carbohydrates.
I
love my life in Australia and my real home is there, and yet being in Poland
touches some nostalgic strings and makes me feel that many of my important interests
lie in Poland. This revolves mostly around cultural issues. I love atmosphere
of old towns, their architecture including churches. For many people churches
are boring, but not so for me. They typically contain architectural gems, paintings,
sculptures, frescoes and such. It all adds up to this specific churchy atmosphere
that I love.
I
also notice a little different attitude to music, books, theatre and social
life. Some of it I very much like the Polish way. I see more reverence for
cultural life in Poland than I observe in Australia. It may be only superficial,
but I like people dressing up for theatre, concerts or opera. I admit, there is
some formality about it. This maybe unnecessary, but for me it is nice even if
on two recent occasions, I was the one who was under-dressed.
During
my two weeks in Poland I started strongly my cultural life and attended two events.
One was the Closing of the Season Concert in the Warsaw Philharmonic and the
second Nabuco by Verdi in the Gdansk Opera House.
The place seemed smaller than I remembered it |
When
I entered the Warsaw Philharmonic the memories came back with the strength. I
used to be a regular concert goer and this was the place I visited most often.
Memories of my past concert companions brought some nice feelings and some sad
ones. So many people disappeared from my life…
The view of Warsaw Philharmonic still moves me when I approach it |
The first
part of the concert was a little disappointing as the Cello Concerto of Elgar
was played not as well as I had expected. Gustav Mahler’s early cantata was a different
story. It has been many years since I heard Warsaw Philharmonic Choir and I think
we both, the choir and I, matured over the years. The choir even got a Grammy
Award the last year. Looks that my maturing was of a different kind, as there
are no awards in this discipline. It was a great concert finishing with a lot
of clapping, flowers, speeches to farewell the retiring musicians and
celebrating the famous choir. Great evening to file in my memory.
I
did not intend to write reviews of concerts or operas, so I stop here. I only
wanted to illustrate some aspects of my life during the Polish holiday.
This
post is really to mark my returning to blogging, so soon I will write more.
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