Travels

Hvar

This is my first time typing on a bus, mid-journey between Split and Dubrovnik. I could think of a couple of even more uncomfortable things, but my willingness to endure the arching of my wrists in a very orthopedic position comes to prove just how eager I was to write this blog post.

After months of little to no inspiration to draw, write, or do anything creative, my muse finally paid a visit to me in Hvar. I managed to make the 1-hour ferry journey from Split without seasickness (closing my eyes as soon as I sit down and avoiding looking out the window at all costs seems to do the trick), which allowed me to enjoy a very fancy mango bowl for breakfast at a very fancy hotel right after setting foot on the island.
I was the only one staying on land for the day, and after waving goodbye to everyone else before their own island-hopping boat ride, I started the long solitary expedition walk my introverted brain had been looking forward to for a while.

It was hot, but having already experienced almost a whole week in Croatia in the middle of July made it easier for me to ignore my sticky shirt, humid hair on the back of my neck, and the sweat drops rolling down my legs. I walked westbound as far as I could, with a decreasing surrounding density of tourists the further I got. Hvar would not be a good example to describe deceptive marketing —everything I saw looked exactly the way it does in advertisements or the results of a quick Google search: clear pristine waters with multiple turquoise tones, clear skies without a single cloud, lush thriving Mediterranean vegetation combining different kinds of pine trees, cactuses, and flowers, well-maintained cobble and pebble stone paths, homogeneous stone buildings with cream and pastel colors, the loud sounds of cicadas all around, and the occasional soft breeze briefly making my sweaty skin feel a bit cooler.
I was in awe of my surroundings, and this wonderful feeling lasted until the very end. The more I walked, the more excitement I felt about the freedom to explore such a paradisiacal, somewhat remote place on my own, with the only company of my beloved mirrorless Sony Alpha.

I made my way up the hill climbing to the city fortress, dating to 1000 B.C. The views of the city were as beautiful from an upper perspective as they had been by the shore. It was pretty empty up there, so I could marvel at the sights without the distraction of countless other tourists bustling around me, which is a pretty rare occurrence in these areas in the middle of July. That is until the sound of Andalusian Spanish next to me caught my attention, and I ended up meeting a group of four Spanish guardias civiles (perhaps "military police" is close enough to the right term in English?), who I felt very comfortable chatting and joking with. This experience very vividly reminded me in which ways Germans/Swiss are fundamentally different from my fellow countrymen (and women), and how much easier it is for me to feel connected and understood by my own culture —both in terms of language, but also sense of humor and general demeanor. It exacerbated my baseline homesickness for a while, but not enough to accept their invitation to join them to go to the beach. “My parents raised me better than jumping in the car with four complete strangers” is what I said, which was taken with humor and understanding, not a hint of the kind of offense or reactive insistence I suspect I could have been met with elsewhere.

After saying my goodbyes and with the company of a nice chocolate Magnum fortress ice-cream in my stomach, I made my way back to the city, camera in hand, where I wandered around narrower alleys all the way to the East coast, soaking in the sun and more beautiful paradisiacal sights after every turn I took.

Finally, after hours of uninterrupted walking, I decided to take a break. I sat down and enjoyed a Greek salad while bringing to life the doodles for this blog, finally welcoming my long-lost inspiration after a long-lasting creative drought.

I wrapped up by finding a nice bench under the shade, right by the waterfront, where I could people-watch and read a couple of dozen pages of “Klara and the Sun”. I was only interrupted by an inquisitive, lively young woman and her boyfriend, who, looking at my hat, mistook me for MSC staff, which her best friend had recently signed a contract with. "I saw you sitting there before and I wondered where your ship was, since I hadn't see any cruises around here". I explained it was my brother in fact who worked there, which led to a brief but interesting exchange which I couldn't help but share with humor and excitement my family right away.

For being high season in one of the most popular tourist destinations in Europe, I had such a wonderful day —probably one of my favorites in a while. The Mediterranean feels comfortable and familiar to me. It fills me with a sense of belonging and peace that I often miss in Germany and Switzerland.
It is so important to have the opportunity to experience this every once in a while. As my future continues to hold a high degree of uncertainty, these experiences are factors to be considered when making major decisions in the future. For now, though, I am just happy and thankful for such a wholesome, recharging day, and for being able to find my own company grounding and rewarding.

Così vicino, sei lontano…

Having never been to the Italian speaking area of Switzerland, a series of circumstances made of Ticino just the perfect getaway destination.

All neatness, organization and flair of Switzerland bejeweled with the language spoken in Italy plus the lush semi-tropical flora of all Mediterranean coast and the ubiquitous culture of any European country.

Two days surrounded by water and mountains, strolling around in Parco Ciani among luscious flowers and beautifully trimmed pine trees, cycling through picturesque historic villages with names as suggestive as Paradiso, Melide, Bissone, Melano and Riva San Vitale; exploring the summit of Monte Brè and Monte San Salvatore, discovering the secrets hiding around every corner of ancient stone buildings and sinuous alleyways at the old fishing town of Morcote, enjoying delicious juicy pizza and authentic home-made gelatto with first row views to Lago di Lugano…

These are the kind of experiences that make life slow down and halt for a while. And I can't wait to have it all stand still again.

Orchids and Categories

We live for meaning. Meaning itself is the meaning of (rational) life.

I become increasingly aware of it the more of it I find; the more I learn, the more I see, the more complex the world becomes around me as the mysteries of its intricate mechanisms and structures are revealed to my conscious mind, or at least partially exposed. I can be deeply moved to a ground-breaking, soul-shaking degree through any of my senses by a variety of catalysators. Cliché alert, but a certain musical piece —maybe even specifically one part in particular of a certain musical piece— CAN elevate my spirit to the stratosphere; a nice painting is not just pleasant if the way the light is captured and presented filters, portrays and enhances the very elements that shape its obvious and universal appeal in the real, natural world. Such a thing can leave me longingly staring at it for a long time. But strangely enough, such relatively relatable and obvious subjects don’t hold that attention-grabbing ability from my very core exclusively. Taken to the countryside, chances are I‘ll stare at a cow for the same amount of time, if not longer. What are the odds of that exact combination of physical attributes being put together over millions of years to produce that exact result. What features of its anatomy and behavior can be explained by which evolutive pressures and incentives. How does she perceive reality. To what extent is the fashion and intensity of the subjective reality of pain produced and transmitted by her peripheral nerve endings comparable to humans’, to what extent does it differ. In this sense, how does she see in the broadest sense possible. What is she seeing now. What´s the nearest she is able to accommodate to still get a sharp macular focal point. Is she even able to accommodate. Look at those eyes, by the way, they can make anyone’s heart melt. Why would and should a human experience such feelings of tenderness towards a cow. And so on. And finally, I get so pleasantly flustered and overjoyed by deeply engaging and challenging conversation with an uninterrupted, dynamic flow of interconnecting ideas with the potential to be dissected exponentially into infinity. This phenomenon constitutes jet another cliché as I suppose it is what’s most commonly referred to as “human connection”. For me, it immediately translates into higher respect and warm appreciation towards the holder of that interactive capacity. Added into the equation the variable of gender, when female it’ll additionally enhance a feeling of sororal fondness, when male that of enthralling attraction. Thus, to me, almost everything with soul-touching potential falls into one of three categories: natural phenomena, human artistic creation and “human connection”. In just one day, I´ve had the privilege of experiencing all those four forms and sub-forms of exhilarating sensory overload, leaving me completely short-term hypnotized and mid-term inspired, but also somewhat mentally inebriated. I feel very much alive and in this state of gripping intoxication everything seems both completely pointless and intangibly transcendental at the same time.