Friday, July 19, 2013

Poland: ENTER AT YOUR OWN EUCHARIST


I hate saying anything negative about Poland, especially in a medium that can be read by anyone and easily misconstrued. But I think at this point you’d have to be pretty damn daft not to realize that I’ve met some of the most intelligent, genuine and sensitive people during my year abroad.  On a personal level, I’ve made wonderful friends, for which I am everlastingly grateful.

On an institutional level, however, I have to admit that Poland is still not a welcome place for anyone non-Polish, non-Catholic or non-white. The hospital didn’t allow me to have a translator in the room, even though an English philologist who translates professionally was waiting for me and offering her services. They had no understanding of the anxiety and terror that comes with getting injured in a foreign country, and would only get angry with me when I didn’t do what they were asking, instead of realizing I didn’t understand them. Same with the police. When it comes to public services and legislation, Poland is not a welcome place, and I don’t think it will ever restore its diversity until that changes.

I write “restore” deliberately, because for centuries Poland prospered as a colorful mosaic of peoples. In fact, Poland was once a safe haven for non-white, non-Catholics when other countries in Europe drove them abroad. Jews, Muslims, gypsies—they all found refuge under the protective laws of religious tolerance and social autonomy that defined Poland until 1573, when the Jagiellon dynasty ended and nobility overtook the nation. My Jewish friends and family often forget that our ancestors were in Poland for a reason—because, once upon a time, it was where they were most welcome to live without compromising their beliefs.

Yet today (perhaps as much a reflection of the zeitgiest of the contemporary West), Polish legislation has made it harder and harder to be an "other" in Poland. This became abundantly clear last week, when the Polish parliament passed a ban on halal/kosher meat. Given that every non-Christian monotheistic religion requires this ritualistic slaughter for their meat to be deemed clean, this law essentially makes it clear that Jews and Muslims are not welcome in Poland. No non-Christian, myself included, wants to live in a country where a fundamental tradition of their culture has been outlawed.

I’ve been a vegetarian for 16 years, and I doubt I will ever eat meat, kosher or not, again. That doesn’t matter. It doesn’t matter that I will never need kosher meat if I live in Poland. It doesn’t matter that I find the gratuitous consumption of meat immoral when it serves neither our survival nor health. What matters is that banning the tradition my people have done for millennia that shows the utmost respect to the slaughterer, animal and consumer in a nation of factory farming is an incontrovertible act of discrimination and hypocrisy.

The argument behind the law banning kosher meat is that the practice of ritual slaughter, shechita in Hebrew, is inhumane. In shechita, the shochet, or slaughterer, performs the killing with a single incision at the neck in one swift movement. This causes an instant plummet in blood pressure that causes the animal to quickly lose consciousness. The shochet receives rigorous training before being able to perform this task, such that his movement is deft and flawless; the cut must sever the trachea, esophagus and major blood vessels in one quick and continuous cut. For this reason, the knife must be twice as long as the animals neck and perfectly sharp, with no nicks (before every animal, the shochet must run his fingernail along the edge of the knife to make sure of this). Along with training in the prayer, ritual and technique of the act, the shochet must also be deemed adequately intelligent, show love and respect towards animals and have high moral character.

While the scriptures do not provide specific instructions regarding the treatment of the animal during its life, the animal should be treated with same respect it receives in life as upon its death. When a company in the US producing kosher meats was discovered using electric prods on animals’ faces, as is common practice in animal farming today, the Jewish community expressed their outrage and asserted that such behavior makes the meat non-kosher. The president of the Rabbinical Assembly of the Conservative Movement wrote to its community of rabbis that “When a company purporting to be kosher [causes] pain to one of God’s living creatures, that company must answer to the Jewish community, and ultimately, to God.” The Orthodox chair at Bar Ilan University reprimanded the company and deemed the meat non-kosher as well, because “to insist that God cares only about his ritual law and not about his moral law is to desecrate His Name.”

So why has the Polish government deemed kosher or halal meat inhumane? The official reason is that all livestock must be stunned with an electric probe before slaughter, which is not included in the kosher ritual. In other words, kosher meat has been banned because the animals don't get electrocuted. In legal farms, the animals live pressed body-to-body amongst their own filth eating a stew of antibiotics and GMO corn, dragged to their death either by a mechanical chain around their necks or by getting prodded with an electric taser, hung by their feet and “stuck”—the industry term for being stabbed in the neck and left to slowly and inefficiently bleed out—but don't worry; they still receive the humane and all-absolving electric shock before their death. So basically, non-kosher animals can live inexcusably miserable and disgusting lives as long as they're deemed unconscious during the actual moment of death. That’s the legal situation to protect animals right now.

Maybe you're still thinking, “Well, that probe is more humane, isn’t it? Why shouldn’t it be required for all livestock getting slaughtered?” After all, requiring the same treatment for all animals isn’t hypocrisy and certainly not anti-Semitic. Except that carp and fish don’t get stunned. Oh, and except that hunting is a popular and encouraged sport in Poland. Try arguing that one.

Look, whether kosher or not, eating meat is cruel. But at least in the Jewish and Muslim tradition, it is a cruelty we have to face and accept ourselves, rather than blocking ourselves from the reality of our actions with machines. And at least in the Jewish and Muslim tradition, life matters as much, if not more, than the short seconds of death.

How to Hail a Cab in Poland


So remember how I complained in my last entry about nothing exciting happening to me on my Polish Fulbright?

Well, that was stupid of me.

Because now I feel like I was sort of asking for it when a drunk-ass idiot taxi driver decide to plow into me at 35 km/hour, then screech on the brakes, stomp over to where I lied bleeding in shock on the pavement and yell at me until police cars, rubbernecks and an ambulance quickly flooded the scene around a disoriented and terrified foreigner.

But let’s rewind and start from the beginning.

I was heading back to my apartment for my running shoes because I wanted to exercise before sundown. It was about 19:30 (7:30 in the evening for those Americans too lazy for elementary subtraction), which in Poland in June means the sun had just crossed over the zenith. It was cloudy and cool with no rain, perfect jogging weather. I was on the bike path that parallels the busiest street in Wroclaw, a four-lane boulevard called Pope John Paul II Avenue, which is basically what any significant infrastructure in Poland is called (if you travel through Poland, you can go see a John Paul II bridge, fountain, sidewalk, underpass, park, square, tree...you name it, it's probably been dedicated to our newest member of sainthood). As I biked along this designated bike path, I crossed a small street with a car still a good 30 meters away, meaning that he would have more than enough time to slow down and stop to let me pass, as he is legally required to do.  What I didn’t realize is that this car was speeding and had no intention of slowing down or acknowledging the crosswalk in any form, and that he would swerve onto the crosswalk in the course of a right-hand turn--ergo into the parking lane. So I was hit before I even entered the open street. 

Before idiot taxi driver mauled me...


after idiot taxi driver mauled me



Next thing I knew everything was black and I had a strange underwater sensation, a series of angry male voices eddying around me. That part was actually kind of pleasant. But then I surfaced.

Panic rushed in and my foremost and immediate concern was my teeth. My first impulse was to cover my bleeding mouth and check my newly loosened teeth. I didn't concern myself with my brain or my foot or my hands, all of which hit the pavement with equal force and are indisputably more important to my vitality—I cared only for my teeth. I remember the terrifying realization that I hit my right-side canine and all I could think about was that I might loose this tooth forever.

Thankfully there were plenty of witnesses to the accident, which also explains the yelling. Three burly young Polish men had already fenced in the aggressively ill-mannered taxi driver and informed him that he needs to slow down at crosswalks (what a novel idea!) and that he better sit tight and deal with the police because they already have a photo of his license plate thanks to a brilliant liability-inducing invention called a camera phone.  They then helped me off the road, got my former bike and future hunk of scrap metal and called an ambulance for me. My lip had got the brunt of the pavement and produced a healthy flow of blood and my foot looked quite deformed and off-color, but otherwise I was okay, so that was a relief. The ambulance came surprisingly quickly and they hoisted me onto the rolling bed and into the back, where we then proceeded to…sit there and talk to police and fill out paperwork for 40 minutes. I had to take a breathalyzer test, which was near impossible with a busted lip, granted that didn’t stop them from insisting upon getting a reading. After innumerable attempts, the policeman just handed me the device and told me to work on it while he interviewed the witnesses, and that we wouldn’t leave for the hospital until he saw a result. I felt like a child (no cookies until all the broccoli are gone from your plate!), except the requirement was an alcohol level reading, and the withheld “reward” for doing my job was the emergency room.

Finally, I got a number (0.00—don’t worry, I don't like vodka that much), in which we proceeded to…wait some more. The ambulance driver turned on the radio, they offered me a veinful of painkillers and we filled the time by practicing Polish-English together. I was grateful for their jocular and casual manner—this clearly wasn’t an emergency to them, granted they did tell me my foot looked pretty broken. “At least you didn’t get hit by a taxi in the US,” the drug-donning blonde informed me. “Then you wouldn't get treatment at all.”

Finally, it was time to roll to the ER. I waved goodbye to my three burly knights in sweaty cotton and sped towards the hospital with my new trio of doting men. And here’s where I have to lay out the one true loss and travesty of this whole fiasco: the one time in my life I get unbelievably high on top-notch drugs as three attractive young men lay me down on a soft bed and serve my every need to the soundtrack of “Pour Some Sugar on Me” (gotta love Classic Rock radio) has to be in the back of an ambulance when all I can think about is whether I’m going to be in a wheelchair for the next 6 months. FML. 
What a wasted opportunity...


I got taken to the new wing of the hospital, which was quite comfortable and relatively aesthetic. Within seconds, my friends and housemates were rushing through the doors for me, and I felt much safer and at ease. Everything being said, I realized things could be much, much worse. With my spirits on the rise, I asked them how long until I would get treated.

“Eh, az pięć lub sześć godzin.”

Five to six hours? I repeated, incredulous. Yes, they told me, and then proceeded to tell me how I should be grateful I’m not in the US, where it could be days. They explained to me how in the US doctors don’t talk to you, hospitals don’t have equipment and typically people are just left to die. I got these lectures repeatedly from staff in the hospital during my wait. Another staff member woke me up as I waited in my gurney to explain that “you Americans” are always demanding and impatient and think that nobody else matters and have no respect for Poland. I’m not sure where this animosity came from, since outside of the medical community I’ve felt a generally positive attitude towards America. It baffled me. Actually the general attitude of hostility in the hospital from my admission to my dismissal at 3 a.m. surprised me. I understand that the place is understaffed and they didn’t want to deal with a scared American girl, but they were straight-up mean the majority of the time, and their impression of the US medical system seemed to be based solely on ad hoc 60 Minutes horror stories. 

After a few hours of waiting, a man came up to my gurney and began to roll me through the hospital without a word. Nothing is quite as anxiety-invoking as being on a moving bed with no explanation of what’s happening, where you’re going, or why. Who was this guy? A technician? Nurse? Surgeon? Janitor? I had no idea. So I asked. I asked, as politely as possible, where we were headed. He told me to stop whining. When we got to the CT scanner (aha!) he turned to his colleague and called me a big fat American baby in Polish, assuming that wouldn’t understand. That’s when I finally began to cry, which probably didn’t help refute his case.

Well, by 3 a.m. the nightmare was over. We checked out of the hospital and headed home, where my wonderful roommates helped me up the apartment and put me to bed. No broken bones, no missing teeth. All in all, I feel pretty damn lucky.

But I will miss my old commie bike...

 

Thursday, June 20, 2013

In the year of boiled potatoes...

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You know Internet, I’ve always harbored a miasmic stew of resentment, annoyance and, most of all, seething jealousy for real bloggers. People with lives and full-time jobs who somehow manage to foster weekly litters of snarky entries, adeptly bred out of twitter soundbites and too much coffee—people who have a faithful fanbase of Japanese men in their mothers’ basements and college students prolonging their analyses of Dostoevsky’s The Idiot. As you’ve probably noticed, I am not one of these bloggers, despite always secretly wishing I could be (and by that I mean wishing I had an ounce, or even just a drop—hell, I’d take an experimentally negligible vapor—of self-discipline, since that’s all that’s really required to be a consistent blogger). But let’s look at the facts: my last post was in March. My next post might be in September, maybe August if I feel particularly motivated. And my mix-breeds don’t end up the perfect mélange of cute and snarky, but rather somewhat demented and straggly, the kind of hopeless mutt that incessantly gnaws door frames and only manages to “sit” when you need him to move because his droopy butt is crushing your MacBook. Maybe it’s time to accept that I’m not cut out for this line of non-work.

It’s not that I don’t like writing a blog—I genuinely do—but my life just isn’t that exciting. There’s a certain hysterical narcissism that allows other bloggers to provide a play-by-play narrative of their trip to Ikea, or an in-depth exposé of a Subway footlong, that—fortunately for my friends but unfortunately for my Internet infamy—I lack.

You see, the dirty little truth is that my life here, my year of Fulbrighting in Poland, has been excruciatingly uneventful. I wake up. I go to work. I read. I watch a soap opera about young Polish girls getting scammed in London. I burn dinner. I eat burnt dinner. I go to sleep on my left limbs, which fall asleep before I do. In the middle of the night I limp with tingling limbs to bathroom to pee. I go back to sleep and dream that shrieking geese on bath salts are chasing me in the Polish salt mines, only to realize milliseconds before the shrieking birds peck my eyelids off that the shrieking is my morning alarm. I get up. I pick at burnt remains of dinner for breakfast. I momentarily consider changing the sound of my alarm, but then immediately forget what I wanted to do when I pick up my phone and unlock the screen. And so the day continues…

Now I know what you’re thinking: But Elise, you’re ABROAD! You’re doing a FULBRIGHT! You’re in EUROPE! Your life must be more exciting than mine!

Nope. 


Wroclaw is pretty equivalent to any Small Town USA (well, Medium Town, really), except more gray. Men drink beer and watch the game in the pub. Old ladies eternally seek the perfect grapefruit for the best price at the supermarket. Boys race their bikes along the river. Teenage girls wither away their youth and allowance at the local mall. And everyone is white and everyone eats meat-and-potatoes for dinner and everyone watches the same channel on TV narrated by right-wing nutjobs. Sound familiar?

Now don’t get me wrong—I’ve enjoyed living here, and I’ve gained a lot from the past year. I’ve made wonderful friends, eaten wonderful food and ogled wonderfully attractive women. But I think the most surprising aspect of my year abroad has been the fact that it hasn’t surprised me much at all.  I experienced much more culture shock moving to Los Angeles than I’ve ever come close to in Wroclaw. The only difference between Wroclaw and Springfield, USA, is that Springfield has more vowels and obesity. And sometimes beer in Wroclaw is served with a straw (either to avoid the inconvenience of spillage when customers are too drunk to hold their glass upright or to be more child-friendly…I’m not sure which). Anyway, the point is that my expat routine, like the many boiled potatoes I’ve consumed this year, has been fulfilling but not particularly flavorful.

That being said, I plan to post more from now on, and to mix things up. That’s right, for the next few weeks I’m swirling some cheesy goodness and smelly chives on these potato blogs, with short stories, articles, pictures and more. Why, you ask? Well, starting next week, I will no longer have this distracting burden called a job. Yep, starting next week, I’ll no longer have to deal with the energy-consuming responsibilities of conversing in 3 dimensional social settings, where others can actually smell whether you’ve showered and can actually taste the coffee you’ve posted in a black-and-white Walden filter on Instagram. Clothes, hygiene, verbal exchanges, money…soon they’ll all just be fleeting memories of a time long past. Which means, assuming I don’t suddenly create a World of Warcraft avatar or start watching Game of Thrones this weekend, this blog will be the sole center of my energies.

Namaste bitches.

Sunday, March 17, 2013

XIV. Mid-year reports!

So I’ve received a few requests via email for more information regarding the Fulbright. Apparently some of you out in cyberspace still naively consider this blog a source of real information, and so I’ve decided to acquiesce and provide you with my mid-year report, something every Fulbrighter fills out regardless of project or country. Designed as a self-evaluation of one's “progress,” the mid-year report is in the form of a standard online survey, with very few parameters and no indication of what is expected.

The questions are verbatim from the report. The responses are in their original full-length, which I had to condense for the form itself to meet the 1500 character limit per answer.

1. What are/were the most important goals/objectives for your Fulbright project proposal? Please list the top 3 or 4. Next to each goal, select the response that best indicates your progress, to date, in the accomplishment of these goals: 

Achieved, Significant Progress, Some Progress, No Progress, No longer significant.
 

GOAL #1: Write the next Great American(-Polish) Novel

STATUS: Some Progress

Okay, so I may have overestimated the mental resources required to teach full-time while studying a new language myself, as well as my affinity for Polish beer. Yet most of all, I ingenuously underestimated—and by my euphemistic “underestimate” I mean that I did not in any way account for, or have any idea was not just the chimerical conveniences of lazy people— my susceptibility to winter lethargy and this phenomenon my Polish friends call ciśniene with the same whispered dread Hogwarts kids reserve for Voldemort (rough translation: barometric pressure). Seriously, what happened? Everything turned leaden and comatose, and I think I might have unintentionally undergone biological hibernation because I have no concrete recollections of the past 4 months. I only retain one vague impression from (what I believe to have been) late December, which may or may not be unconsciously concocted in the same way our brains fill in minor gaps in images, or missng letters in common words in order to create a congruous narrative. My impression is of waking up in a somnolent gray not knowing whether the luminescent 9:00 on my alarm indicated Ante or Post Meridian time, followed by an epiphany that was not so much an epiphany as a confrontation of the obvious. This brazen realization was that the European clock system (i.e. the 24-hour clock) is not cultural idiosyncrasy or evidence of the utilitarian socialist mentality but pure necessity in a region where one is consumed in perennial darkness.

Let me put it this way: you know those shitty stories about some father who gets dressed every morning at 8:47 am, eats his fibrous oatmeal with brown sugar, kisses the wife goodbye, gives the little league son a paternally affectionate slap on the back and drives off to work in the SUV, as he’s done every morning for sixteen years, except one day—without any warning or signal—he just never comes back? And nobody knows why he left, or where he went? And for the next few months, from 5-6 pm, the wife waits at home thinking that maybe today he’ll walk back through that door like he had always done for sixteen years with his briefcase in hand and his tie slightly askew towards his left shoulder? Well, the Polish sun is one of those shitty fathers.

Basically, this is how it happened: one day the sun just sank over the horizon and never came back.

I was not prepared for this.

Everyone told me, at least with regards to weather, I had nothing to worry about in Poland. Chicago and Warsaw are like brothers, with equally brutal winters; it shouldn’t be anything I haven’t handled before. Freak snowstorms, toppling winds...you know, the usual seasonal affronts. But they failed to mention that I would live in a gloomy twilight for weeks at a time. While Chicago may be similar in terms of weather—temperature, winds, precipitation—these similarities are entirely contingent upon oceanic currents. Geographically speaking, our true European parallel is Rome. Chicago and Rome lie on almost the exact same latitude (41.6° versus 41.7°). The North American parallel to Warsaw, on the other hand, is Saskatoon, Canada, at 52.2°. Thus while I’d been well trained to beef up for ice, wind and hail, I’d not been remotely prepared for becoming the bastard child of a feckless sun of a bitch.

That all being said, I'm about 40 solid pages into my book and about 100 semi-solid. The story is of my grandparents' escape from Poland in 1939, the only members of their large family to elude a tragic and horrible fate. They crossed the country in trucks, cars, horse-buggies, anything with wheels to get to Lithuania before annexation. From there a Japanese diplomat named Sugihara signed a family visa for them to cross Russia on the Trans-Siberian railroad and then take a boat to Japan. After a few months in Japan, they then managed to get a boat from Yokohama to the US on May 7, 1941. I think what fascinates me the most about their story is how they managed to stay weeks, days or sometimes mere minutes ahead of global events that determined their fate. They left Poland on August 26, 1939: five days later they would not have been permitted to leave. Even more incredulous, my grandfather returned to his hometown on the border between Poland and Germany on the night of August 31st, to try to convince his family to join him in running as fast and possible from Hitler’s army. They considered him hysterical and paranoid, and told him there might not be a war at all-- and, even if there was, they would be fine, just as they’d been twenty-five years ago in the Great War. They’d dealt with worse. So my grandfather left, frustrated and terrified for his family, and caught the last train out of Poland that evening. Literally the last train. The tracks were bombed that same night, with the train just barely managing, as if by some preternatural fate, to stay ahead of the bombers. None of his six siblings, parents, aunts, uncles, grandparents, nieces, nephews or cousins survived. Only 2 members of his family remained after the war: a third cousin who had moved to Palestine in the 1920’s, and a fourth cousin whom he'd never met, Leo Seifman, whose story is so incredible (literally) that I doubt I could get away with including it in my novel (which is essentially non-fiction, since I’m not changing any historical facts or events. The “novel” part is that it’s written as a narrative. Someone wears a blue dress. Another person eats an apple while reading Sholem Aleichem. These narrative tools comprise the fictional component of the project.)

The story of Leo Seifman is that, like almost all my relatives from that time, he was sent to the gas chambers. Knowing what fate lay ahead, Leo decided he was in no hurry. He lingered as long as possible in the “changing room,” taking in the plastered walls, the rough texture of each button on his prison uniform, the musky smell of sweat and the slightly bitter almond scent from the residual hydrogen cyanide. He soon found himself at the end of the line of bodies getting filtered into the chamber and decided, since he had nothing to lose, to attempt to slip behind the thick iron door to get a few more seconds of life. Somehow nobody noticed his disappearance in the shuffle until the guards had closed and bolted the door, exposing him naked and alone against the wall. The gassing had already begun and, if nothing else, the Germans were notoriously obsessed with efficiency and economy, so wasting an entire canister of Zyklon B on one person was out of the question. Instead they just sent him back to work under the presumption that he’d end up back in the chamber soon enough anyway. And so he worked, until the Russians liberated the camp.

2. GOAL #2: Learn Polish.

STATUS: (Relatively) Significant Progress

I arrived in Poland knowing only the phrases comprised in the first three units of Rosetta Stone TOTALworld (c), and now—after four months of relentlessly subjecting myself and my more patient Polish confidantes to what could be interpreted by those not involved as the maniacally circular and nonsensical ramblings of a borderline schizophrenic—I can...well...survive. This may not sound as impressive as it feels (which is not very much either), but I've never had a talent for adopting foreign tongues, a failure I attribute as a byproduct of my upbringing in the patriotic monoculture known as America (I also like to think my English is so predominant it overreaches into those sections of my brain that would've otherwise been reserved for foreign languages… like my American Standard English is a large, red pick-up truck and the Broca's area the standard size of a parking space designated for compact cars (in cerebral terms of course, or else I’d be a giant human...as for why the truck is red, I’m not sure, but it feels like a vital and mandatory component of the analogy so I’m keeping it in.) And so my ASE spills over the white line into the areas reserved for cute European vehicles, like the Polish Maluch, the French Peugeot, the German Volkswagen.)

In fact, the notion of tackling a new language (even worse, a Latinate, synthetic language) terrified me enough to seriously consider deboarding the plane after the LOT Air flight attendant wished me "dzien dobry," my first non-computerized confrontation with this insane and illogical linguistic system (true story…I think I was also excruciatingly anxious at the prospect of living alone in Poland for a year). Thus the fact that I can compose even a minor sentence (Gdzie jestem? Co to jest?) is a small miracle, and more importantly the result of more tears, sweat and expletives than anyone donned with the honor of a Fulbright should ever confess to discharging. And, of course, I couldn’t have done it without the following: my Polish teacher, the most patient woman in the history of education, whom I meet 1.5 hours/day M-F; some patchy tandem tutoring sessions; and my housemates, Polish lawyers who never cease to dazzle me with their capacity for grammar, native speaker or no. (And, yes, I’m aware that I essentially just wrote an “Acknowledgements” section to my studying Polish. It is that big a deal.)

3. GOAL #3: Teach English

STATUS: Achieved

I’ve been teaching English Tuesdays and Thursdays with Professor Elaine Horyza. We teach 4 sections Tuesdays (each 1.5 hours with 15 minutes in between), and 2 sections Thursdays. While Elaine determines the majority of the syllabus and structure (she’s prescribed very strict and somewhat limiting teaching goals by both the university and the new EU standards, to be officially enforced starting Fall 2013), I get to teach at least one section per class, and plan 2 classes per semester. Last semester I designed 2 classes around social media: vocabulary, implications for the English language, social implications, personal implications, political (you guessed it) implications, etc. We discussed the logistics of relationships and dating through this new, non-physical venue. We discussed the potential for careers and jobs through this new market medium. We discussed the role social media played in the US presidential elections, the Arab Spring, the Occupy Movement…tackling the overriding question, “Is social media a tool or a detriment to democracy?” And the class amazed me with their astute and perspicacious ideas and opinions.

This semester my unit will be about food and animals. Eating animals, owning animals, protecting animals, with all the ethical and practical ramifications such practices necessarily engender in us H. sapiens. In Korea and the Philippines, dogs are delicious; in Europe and America, companions. In France, a baguette with butter and cheese is the perfect start to the day; in the US, we harbor an institutional distrust and resentment of gluten, fat and dairy. So it should be interesting to see how my students feel about food culture, and how often (if ever) they contend with the consumption of sentient creatures.

4. GOAL #4: Work/volunteer at a local theater

STATUS: No longer significant.

Get involved in theater:
In my original letter of intent, I claimed I would effortlessly implant myself in the local theater scene, wherever that would be and in whatever form that would manifest itself. Basically, I assumed that the second my dramatic feet touched the potatoed Polski earth, thespians from around the region would blow their conk shells and plug in their S4s (the theater world’s Bat-Signal, though of course they would have only done this if my plane landed in the evening, which it didn’t), and summon me to the stage. Needless to say, with my elementary Polish phrases and well-rusted experience (I haven’t done theater since college), this did not happen. It also might be because finding a conk shell 450 km from the nearest body of saltwater was too much of a challenge.

Furthermore, I quickly learned that dabbling in theater was not an option. Like street gangs, marriage and high fashion, you’re either in or you’re out: 100%. Make a full commitment or don’t make one at all. And since I had many ideas and ambitions for this year (see goals 1-3), I decided to stay out.

I do, however, attend many plays here. Studio Matej and Theater Zar at the Grotowski Institute have put on my favorite performances thus far (most notably “Caesarean Section: Essays on Suicide,” which I saw twice in one weekend because it was that mind-blowingly confusing and horrible and gorgeous), as well as Song of the Goat Theater, which isn’t as viscerally decadent but intellectually dynamic and worth noting. Others worth a mention are Theater Polski and Teatr Wspołczesny, which are both great for listening practice with Polish (see goal #3).


5. GOAL #5: Find Polish lover

STATUS: No progress

Don’t worry internet. I didn’t actually include this one in my mid-year report.


What kind of changes did you make in order to adjust to the local culture?

Honestly, Polish culture isn't too different from Chicago culture, which makes sense given that for the past 50 years our largest human import has been of the perogi-consuming variety.

I will concede that I've become more clothes-conscious, since women here tend to spend more time and energy on appearance (my college sweatpants were the first casualty of European living). I've also become more patient, but that's been a matter of force rather than choice. People don't cross the street on a red sign, no matter what. Even if it's -20°F (or C), and snowing, and the road is closed, and a giant sloth is attacking them with razor sharp teeth, and someone managed to build a time machine and go back to 1879 and convince Karl Benz to destroy all his blueprints such that the automobile never came into existence, even then people would STILL wait for the light to change. There's also a great deal of forming lines before a callously fusty older females, whose favorite two words are a resounding “Nie ma!” (Literal translation: Not have!), which they typically bark with a rough contraction of the abdomen, which also (at least observations indicate) comprises the full extent of their daily physical activity. Worst of all, people stand in the middle of escalators without moving. The frustration often brings me to tears.


What types of safety issues were prevalent in the country (problems with diet, pollution, crime, etc.) and what safety precautions would you recommend?

I can't think of anything.


This place is safer than anywhere in the US in terms of crime (I forget my iPhone on tables at cafes and restaurants all the time) and the food is very easy for sensitive stomachs. Best of all, not only have I managed to maintain a strict vegetarian diet, but I've discovered new dishes, unbelievable vegan restaurants and many fellow conscientious eaters to partake in aforementioned restaurants with me.


Please comment on other aspects of your social and cultural adjustment.

It would be easy to atavise my first few months here with laughter and smiles, the same way we often look back on elementary school as one long and cordial playtime, when in fact we all struggled socially and developmentally and I still-to-this-day have strong residual emotions of helplessness and impotence instigated from activities as innocuous as ordering juice over an adult-sized counter, or approaching the "cool kid" monkey bars, or basic mental problems such a 3x4=?.

The truth is I struggled more than I expected my first few months here, because—if you replace "monkey bars" with the northwest corner of Monsieur cafe, and "juice" with coffee—all those quandaries I just mentioned from 3rd grade apply once again as major stress-inducers.

On top of that, my first few months here were lonely, lonely in a way 3rd graders cannot fathom. Lonely in a way only adults understand, because only adults realize how deeply ontological and interminable such loneliness. And sometimes I had to go home early to cry and ask myself "What the hell am I doing in Poland? Who am I? What am I doing in my life?" and then wishing I had somebody to listen these questions even if she didn't know the answer or diagnosed me with some anxiety disorder I likely already have. In other words, in my first few months here, I began to understand Chekhov's Masha and Dostoevsky's Sergeant X on levels I never wanted (maybe I should’ve applied for a Fulbright in Russia...).

On the brighter side, I've since pulled myself out of this state and thrived, and that's not an easy thing to do when living alone in a foreign place. In other words, I would finally call myself "adjusted" and relatively happy (relative to writers, that is, which is admittedly a low standard). Also, I'm heading to a birthday party as soon as I finish this report, so my happiness is about to be bolstered with liquor and chocolate cake. You might want to consider repeating this question to me tomorrow.


Please comment on your travel to and arrival in your host country. Did you experience any particular difficulties? Was there anything special that made your adjustment easier? Are there suggestions or hints that you could offer future grantees to your country/world area?

Booking the flight was easy and straight-forward, and I stayed in a dorm arranged by my university when I arrived, which was not remotely comfortable or clean but served its purpose for the initial 2-3 days before traveling to Warsaw for orientation. The only issue was that I had to pay for my flight to Poland with my own money, because we did not receive our first installment within a reasonable time to reserve a seat. If I hadn’t been fortunate enough to have the personal expenditure to do this, I’d be trapped in a troublesome and frustrating bind, which is something to keep in mind for next year’s class.

My only other "suggestion or hint" for anyone heading to Warsaw from their base city is to take the train, not the bus. It's worth the extra money to be comfortable, safe and able to sleep/work with ease. The trains here tend to be timely and spacious (and first class is typically only 30 zlotys ($8) more, with a guaranteed seat and a table, outlet, snacks, etc. Well worth a mini-monetary splurge). The bus, on the other hand, is horrifically long, uncomfortable and crowded, and the roads wind and dip and swerve the entire route (for more details, see blog entry #7 “Bath Salts Geese and UFOs”). Apparently a highway is in the process of being built, but the pace of public infrastructure is one of the few vestiges of communism that seems in no hurry to change (and yes, I am aware of the less-than-clever entendre in that sentence). I think this highway will be a few long years away. Until then, stay on the tracks.


In what areas have you found IIE, the U.S. Department of State, U.S. Embassy personnel and/or the Fulbright Commission especially helpful? What areas need additional attention? What improvements would you suggest?

The communication has been non-existent, but I anticipated this. Everyone told me that Fulbrights are notoriously unsupervised, and that you have to be disciplined and self-motivated. I still don’t know anyone’s name at IIE, USDS or the Embassy, except for Internal Unit Chief Kevin Kabumoto, whom I met randomly through the Forum for Dialogue Among Nations, and is incontestably the coolest Asian in Poland. If he reads this report, tell him I owe him a drink (or three) next time I head to Warsaw.

I haven't had any issues, so I haven't had a pressing need to contact anyone for professional reasons—thus I can't say what the response level would be. However, given that the Embassy is a top priority government agency, I’d assume prompt and thorough, but I also wouldn’t bet more than 7 zloty on that assumption. But at least I’ve been a Fulbright pre-sequester, right? I’d imagine the response time and organization will be even worse next year. And something tells me that the embassy dinners and opening ceremonies may have less champagne and hors d’oeuvres come 2014…but what was the question again?

Oh right. Attention. Improvements. The only thing I wish had been better clarified (and still don't understand) is our insurance plan. They basically gave us a useless propaganda booklet and walked away. I have no idea how to get reimbursed for prescriptions, etc., or how to book/pay for a doctor's appointment.

Monday, January 21, 2013

Hey, guess what? It's my head, and I'll do what I want with it

I've always lived in major cities...Chicago, NYC, London. On the rare occasions I've lived in smaller towns, I've been insulated in the uber-liberal goo of academia (Ann Arbor, Claremont, New Haven, etc). So Wroclaw is the closest I've come to true small-town life. Calling Wroclaw a small town typically annoys my Polish friends, because they consider it a major city, but by American standards a regional capital of 630,000 doesn't exactly imbibe the "anything goes" anonymity of a concrete jungle. While some minor subculture action does fester below the surface, overall the presentation is wholesale heteronormative and somewhat redolent of high school, in the sense that every girl wants to look like they've walked out of the same commercial magazine selling feminine beauty. Long silky hair, luscious and glossy lips, hairless, scarless,  moleless, wrinkleless. Everything-less. Some of the more daring women flaunt a shorter but unquestionably feminine haircut, or keep the thickness of their eyebrows if they really want to draw attention as going rogue.

As for me, I've never shaved my legs. My eyebrows are still complete in their glory. I don't wear much make-up, and my favorite pair of pants are grape-print leggings. Oh, and I got a haircut this week:


A super futuristic, bright red haircut. A haircut from the year 3000, when the human race is so overpopulated that everyone is gay; when high heels are talked about like corsets; when people communicate thoughts and memories through blinking and entering a mind cloud; when computers are no longer separate entities but embedded into our bodies, such that my every touch and sound can be morphed into whatever form I please. And I like it here. 3000 is a good year, especially for Scandinavian wines and long-haired cogs (cat-dog hybrids). I think I'll hang out here for awhile.

But the point is this. Wearing this hair in a studio and at a photo shoot is quite different than wearing it at the gym, or the mall, or the coffee shop. And it's a lot more trying than I thought. I've cut off my hair before. But here, in Wroclaw, this is the first time I've ever felt self-conscious about it. It took all my willpower not to shout or cry in the middle of the market square this afternoon.

So here's what I have to say to the jerks on the tram and the old ladies selecting tomatoes while really gossiping about my head. It's my head. It's my body. And I'll do whatever I damn well please with it. If you don't like it, tough shit.

And guess what else? By demanding the same limited standards of performance and appearance from your fellow citizens, you are limiting yourself, putting yourself in a tiny hole that confines your ability to explore the full diversity of what the human mind can express and create. You are participating in a race that you'll never win, and that will leave you feeling empty and unfulfilled and unattractive. Because your outrage is really due to the fact that I'm cheating. I'm not playing the game. You can't rank me beside the other girls and see where I line up, because I'm not trying to fit that mold. And I think you would have a lot more fun in life if you stopped trying to figure out where you stand in the pack too. You don't have to be a humanoid alien from the year 3000. You could be from the year 1700. Or 300. Or 1979. Or another dimension altogether, where years don't exist. You could be a new color, a new species, a new gender, a new artform, a new movement, a new sound. Imagine how much more dynamic our world would be. So stop acting jealous or offended and find your own image, something that no one can touch because it's so above and beyond what they know. Expand their minds. Expand your mind. Turn off the TV. Close the magazine. Do something radical that pushes you out of your comfort zone. Challenge yourself. Challenge your insecurities. Challenge your limitations.

When I first chopped off all my hair, girls kept calling me "brave." Again and again, I would hear them say "I wish I could do that; it's so brave." Well, guess what? You can! You only need to follow these three simple steps: Step 1. make a ponytail. Step 2. open scissors. Step 3. Close scissors over ponytail. Voila! It's not Julia Child's Coq au Vin. Should you chop off all your hair? If you want to, yes. If not, no. But don't wistfully stare at me and tell me you wish you could do that too, like it's beyond your capability. Do it. Or not. As long as it's your desire, your personal choice, and not your insecurities making the choice for you. High school is over, thank goodness. The popular girls won't spray whip cream into your locker or spill coffee all over your white dress. The only mean girl you have to be afraid of now is the one in front of you in the bathroom mirror. Maybe it's time to show her a lesson.