It was a few degrees below zero in
Toronto but I felt fine, and as long as I didn't spend too much time
in the shade I enjoyed my walks. It was a few degrees below zero in
Reykjavik but I felt warm enough, and as long as I stayed out of the
wind, and I enjoyed my walks.
It was a few degrees above zero
in Amsterdam and I was frickin' freezing, lingered longer indoors and
curtailed my walks, though in that city of canals, living history,
and global exchange, I enjoyed every step. Was it the humidity? Had I
burned off some burrito-bestowed belly insulation already? Was the
enthusiasm of being overseas calming into a rhythm?
I don't know, but
I'm glad I had enough traveler enthusiasm to protect me when I walked
into my hostel in Amsterdam. Claustrophobic spaces of slowly
splintering wood, stale smoke, and a bare florescent bar bulb a high
pitch of scream abrading both ear drum and retina.
Welcome back to
hostel living.
A scrawny traveler
in dingy boxer shorts and back hair was asleep in twisted sheets,
1:30 PM, in a musty room with six metal bunk-beds, four battered
lockers, and one window. It was hard to tell if one of the lockers
was available, with two bottles of nearly empty hard liquor, an empty
plastic bag, and a little plastic box (just the size for drug
transport) rattling ominously.
The thought crossed
my mind “Am I too old for this?”
I put the bottles,
bag, and box next to the overflowing garbage can, slid my backpack in
the locker, and went looking for someplace warm to drink a cup of
tea.
I had one last
night alone before meeting K at the airport and starting/returning to
a whole new/familiar world of living, questions and answers, and
relationship. And I was hungry for all of it.
But first the more
immediate hunger that defines a substantial percentage of backpacker
life. A chain I remember from Spain apparently lives in The
Netherlands too, where the falafels are cheap, and you can fill the
pita with as much veggie topping as you like. I spoke Dutch with an
Indian woman, snow like salt crystals on chairs stacked beside
useless outdoor cafes, and the bicycle traffic never stops.
It
felt good to be there.
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