Friday, August 10, 2012
New York city graffiti (street art in New York)
Thursday, August 9, 2012
Planes, trains, not automobiles
Last week I
was a New Yorker again, at least for a few days, on my annual trip back to the
USA. I end up with so many impressions and reflections about modes of transportation—starting with flying. Ironic
that just about the same time that flying has become fairly comfortable, that
weather extremes are forcing long delays at airports, preventing us from
getting on those planes and taking off on time. That was my experience this
time; a four-hour delay leaving Oslo for Newark, and a one-hour delay on the
return trip. In both cases, weather was the culprit—thunderstorms and tornadoes
(in New York) the night before I was to fly to Newark, and thunderstorms on the
return trip. The plane used for the Newark to Oslo trip was the same as the one
for the Oslo-Newark trip, hence the delay. I could not help but wonder why SAS
managed to get a plane out on time whereas United did not, but no one is giving
me the answer, except to say something about the crew and the legal
requirements for them to rest. It makes sense in any case, and United was quick
to respond to potential customer dissatisfaction by offering us a number of ‘rewards’
for our patience—7000 extra bonus miles, substantial discounts on future trip
purchases, and the like. I chose the extra bonus miles. Once I got on the
plane, I had no complaints about the actual flights, either going or coming
back. It is my impression that the future will only hold more of these types of
extreme weather situations, so it’s just to get used to flight delays and to
work on becoming more patient. Because really, there is nothing one can do
about them anyway, and I don’t want airlines to risk flying through
thunderstorms, lightning or hurricanes in order to maintain punctuality at the
expense of safety. I ended up exploring the duty-free shops and bookstores in
great detail as I had the time to do so. I ate a decent lunch (courtesy of
United) and thought briefly about the film The
Terminal with Tom Hanks—about an immigrant who ended up living in an
airport terminal after he arrived in the USA. I never saw the film, but I
remember some of the reviews when it came out some years ago. I wonder how
business travelers manage; they must have to leave a day early in order to be
sure that they make an important meeting if that meeting is overseas (Europe or
America). That has got to elevate the cost of business travel—to pay for an employee’s
extra night in a hotel when he or she arrives at his destination a day before in
order to dodge potential flight delays. I don’t have those problems,
thankfully, since my trips are not usually for business. I don’t mind flying
for the most part; the planes are so modern now. Turbulence is not as bothersome
as it used to be (at least what I’ve experienced so far and I hope it remains
that way), and air quality on the plane has improved dramatically just within
the past five years or so. That’s a big change on long flights—less dehydration
and lightheadedness; the major problem still remains the leg room (lack of) in
economy class. That has not improved; as far as I can determine, it’s gotten
worse as airlines try to pack in more passengers per flight.
Once in New
York City, it is easy to get around without a car, in fact it is preferable not
to drive a car in Manhattan, even though it is not difficult to find your way
around in this city borough. The major problem is traffic—lots
of it, at all times during the day. The
traffic is heart-attack inducing, and not for impatient or aggressive souls. There
is no rhyme or reason to the amount of traffic, just that it exists. I remember
my commuting days in the 1980s; sometimes it took an hour just to get across
town if I drove in from New Jersey to my east-side uptown job. So I don’t drive
now when I come back to the city. I take the subway—which has really gotten
much better since the 1980s—clean stations, the presence of police on subway
trains and platforms, passengers who behave well (no rowdiness as far as I can
see) and a remarkably cheap price for a subway ticket. Two dollars and
twenty-five cents for one ride; compared to Oslo prices, that’s a dream price.
A one-way bus/subway ticket in Oslo will cost at least double that. And if I want
to get to Westchester from Manhattan, which I often do, the best way to do that
is to take the Metro-North Hudson line commuter trains. I used to take the
Hudson line back and forth to Manhattan from Tarrytown, just like my father did
for many years during his work lifetime, and as far as I can remember, this
service has always been good to excellent. Trains are on time, ticket prices
are not exorbitant, and you get to experience the scenic part of the trip when
the tracks run parallel to the beautiful Hudson River. Of course I am partial
to trains in general, so I am a bit biased. But I had the experience of taking
a commuter train from Manhattan to New Jersey on this trip, and the service did
not compare to that on Metro-North; it was ok at best. And of course coming
into the beautiful end station on the Hudson line--Grand Central--is quite ok
with me. Overall, getting around in the New York metropolitan area is not
problematic, nor should it be, with good planning. It won’t break your budget
either.
Friday, August 3, 2012
Summer movie viewing
Some really
good (old and newer) movies that I have seen recently, in no particular order:
Monday, July 30, 2012
A good book--Bad Science by Ben Goldacre
If I could
recommend one good book this summer, Bad
Science by Ben Goldacre would be it. I know the book has been around for
several years, but I am just finally getting around to reading it. I am
thoroughly enjoying it, not only as a scientist interested in how the public
understands science, but also as a member of that public. As I read the book, I
try to put myself in the shoes of non-scientists, to determine if they can really
understand what Ben Goldacre is saying. I believe they can—he is that good a
writer—never dull or dry, rather smart and humorous, but deadly serious concerning
what he writes about. I find myself thinking—yes, it’s good to be skeptical and
questioning, it’s correct to want to see good statistics in newspaper articles,
something to which he devotes an entire chapter (Bad Stats). It’s correct to
want the media to be accountable for their reporting of medical and scientific
issues. I know that it’s ok to be all these things, because as a scientist, I
both write and review articles (peer review) for scientific journals. Part of
learning to become a scientist involves learning to be critical, objective, unemotional,
and tough when reviewing articles for your peers as well as when writing your
own. You learn to welcome constructive criticism from co-authors and journal
editors alike. You learn to swallow your pride and put aside your ego often, to
edit your own article in ways that you never thought possible, and to suggest
that other scientists do the same when it is your turn to be a reviewer.
I think Bad Science should be required reading
for high school and college students, so important is its message. And it might
get fledgling scientists to really take
a look at what is demanded of them for the future in terms of the quality of
the research they will perform, and why it is important for them to adhere to a
few basic ground rules. Because Ben Goldacre has no patience for quacks or
sloppy science, and he is not afraid to say so. Here are just a few of the
chapter titles in Bad Science: The
Placebo Effect; The Nonsense du Jour; How the Media Promote the Public
Misunderstanding of Science; Why Clever People Believe Stupid Things; and The Media’s MMR Hoax. He is merciless
when it comes to holding the media accountable for what they write about
medicine and science, and he is right. They should be held accountable, from
journalists all the way up to editors. But as I said, he is also humorous, in
that especially British sort of way. His description of the media frenzy
surrounding Tony and Cherie Blair’s failure to comment as to whether they had
vaccinated their infant son Leo, and their foray into the world of homeopathy
and New Age, is priceless. Ditto his
description of how the scientific community dealt with the anti-vaccine campaign
of a few years ago; here is an example from his chapter about the MMR
(measles/mumps/rubella triple vaccine) hoax—“Emotive anecdotes from distressed
parents were pitted against old duffers in corduroy, with no media training,
talking about scientific data”. If nothing else, you get a good mental picture
of stodgy old scientists who were totally clueless as to how they should
counter the arguments against vaccinating children. Hence his campaign for the
public understanding of science; it involves prodding scientists to explain
their work clearly and concisely to the public as much as it does prodding the
public to make a real effort to learn to understand how science is done. Ben
Goldacre also writes a column for the British newspaper The Guardian, and
otherwise a website that he updates regularly:
http://www.badscience.net/, both of them well-worth checking
out.
Friday, July 27, 2012
Summer cottage at Nesoddtangen
We are
currently vacationing for a week at a summer cottage on Nesoddtangen (the tip
of the Nesodden peninsula). We have rented this particular cottage many times
during the past twenty years that I have lived in Norway. The cottage was
willed to the cancer hospital where my husband works, like several others
available for summer rentals, by patients who felt that they had received good
treatment there. At present, there are at least six (perhaps more) such
cottages available for rental; through my hospital the number is about the
same. Some are cottages in the mountains; others are cottages on the sea. Our
cottage, situated on the Oslo fjord, is about a twenty-five minute ferry ride
from Oslo. It is far enough away from the city to get the feeling that one is
out in the countryside, yet near enough to it via the ferry if there is reason
to make the trip. In the ‘old days’ (early 1990s), we would sometimes take the
ferry or our own boat into the city, to the Aker Brygge shopping area, to do
some necessary grocery shopping, fill up on supplies, eat lunch at one of its
many restaurants, or just walk around and window-shop. With our boat we were
able to take longer boat trips around the Nesodden peninsula or to Drøbak, a
lovely little coastal town about an hour’s boat ride from Nesoddtangen. One
year we rented the cabin in September, even though we no longer were on
vacation; we lived there for the week and went into work each day by boat. We
would make a thermos of coffee for the trip and drink it on the way into Oslo
harbor, shivering in the chilly autumn air.
The other night, as I sat writing in the cottage’s large living room, I noticed that storm clouds were gathering and the wind was picking up. I could hear it blowing around the cabin. It was only 7pm, but storm clouds filled the sky, threatening rain later on. The weather has been so unstable this summer; torrential rains one day followed by a day with hail and snow (in some areas of Oslo). That was last week. Other days are warm and sunny, like today, a real summer day, when the blue skies seem to go on forever. But as far as the weather goes, one needs to be prepared for all eventualities. After twenty years here, I have learned to take the weather in stride.
The first evening of
our arrival at the cabin, it was chilly, so my husband lit a fire in the large
red-brick fireplace in the corner of the living room. The fire’s warmth, topped
off by a cup of hot chocolate, made everything alright with the world, and it didn’t
matter if it was chilly outside in the middle of summer. The following day, the
temperatures were warmer, although the sky was still a bluish-gray,
dominated by large storm clouds--rain was predicted. During late afternoon, the
winds pick up and don’t die down until around 8pm. Sometimes you can hear the
wind blowing almost mournfully through the trees during the night, a sound that
takes some getting used to, because it is so continual. And this year, unlike
previous years, the cottage grounds are literally infested with brown Iberia
snails; it’s difficult not to step on them. They have become quite a problem in
recent years for the eastern part of Norway.
My early
memories of being in Norway are bound up in visits to this cottage during the
summers, in large festive parties that we managed to throw on meager budgets in
the early days, pleasant times with relatives, friends, and their children. We
often sat out until late in the evening, talking and laughing. It would be
light outside until 11pm. Sometimes there was someone who played guitar, and we
sang along. During the day, the children played along the shore, looking for
mussels to crack open so that they could be used as bait for crabs. The crabs
were always tossed back into the water; too small to eat. I used to love
photographing the jellyfish—two kinds-brennmanet
(Lion's mane jellyfish, which is a stinging jellyfish with long tentacles) and glassmanet (generally non-stinging). The
former look like fried eggs sunny side up; the latter are fragile-looking,
glassy in appearance, and quite beautiful with their green and pink hues. I
love watching how they move and swim. I don’t see many of them this year,
unfortunately.
Sometimes at night we would go down to the wharf where our boat
was moored and look at the small bioluminescent creatures
in the water (phytoplankton). They were like little dots of light flickering in
the dark water, which was filled with them. During lazy afternoons we would go
berry-picking; there were raspberry bushes in front and off to the side of the
cottage (there are still a few) and along the road leading down to the ferry. If
we were lucky we found wild strawberry bushes.
Cottage at Nesoddtangen |
The other night, as I sat writing in the cottage’s large living room, I noticed that storm clouds were gathering and the wind was picking up. I could hear it blowing around the cabin. It was only 7pm, but storm clouds filled the sky, threatening rain later on. The weather has been so unstable this summer; torrential rains one day followed by a day with hail and snow (in some areas of Oslo). That was last week. Other days are warm and sunny, like today, a real summer day, when the blue skies seem to go on forever. But as far as the weather goes, one needs to be prepared for all eventualities. After twenty years here, I have learned to take the weather in stride.
Fireplace at the cottage |
Brown snail on road |
Brennmanet or Lion's mane jellyfish |
Much has
changed during the past twenty or so years, in regard to the cottage itself as
well as its visitors. When we first used to come here, drinking water had to be
drawn up from a well, and drawing it up was hard work. The cottage had no
bathroom—no shower or toilet; rather an outhouse that I do not remember fondly.
I remember hating outhouses already as a young child; one of our favorite
family picnic areas in Pound Ridge, New York had outhouses instead of regular
bathrooms-- the outhouses themselves were unpleasant places to enter—dark and
filled with flies, and the smell was awful and pervasive. Over the years, the
outhouse at the cottage was replaced by what was called an environmental toilet
located in a ‘bathroom’ of sorts attached to the house, and this year, to our
(happy) surprise, that room has now been converted into a regular bathroom with
a full shower, sink and toilet. Most ‘cottages’ now in Norway are quite
luxurious (and not really cabins at all)—arrayed with all the trimmings—radiant
floor heat, state-of-the-art kitchens and bathrooms, exemplifying the
accumulation of personal wealth in this country over the past twenty years.
People want convenience and comfort now. When it comes to having a nice
bathroom, I am in that group. But otherwise, I am content with the simple
trappings of this cottage. Many of the couples with whom we socialized early on
are no longer together. Some have new partners and new lives, and are no longer
in our circle. Those couples who are still together now vacation in warmer
places—where sun and warmth are guaranteed. I can honestly understand their
wish for sunshine, warmth, and stable summer weather. Sometimes I miss the old
days though. Some relatives are quite elderly now, too frail to make the
journey to visit us at the cottage. We make the journey to visit them instead.
The children who used to come here are grown up now and will soon be having
children of their own. My husband and I are alone at the cottage this week,
enjoying our time alone, reading, writing (me), sleeping, shopping for
groceries, watching TV in the late evenings, and being generally lazy. Time
passes slowly, but it passes and moves us onward. Next week I will be in New
York for my annual visit. When I remember back to our time at the cottage,
during the wintertime perhaps, I will wonder what it was we did each day at the
cottage. But then I look at photos and remember; today my husband picked
wildflowers, yesterday we were able to barbecue, today we took a long boat
trip, and so on. I look at him, at our life, and wonder how it is that more
than twenty years have passed since we first got together, since I first moved
to Norway. Time for reflection will do that to you; nostalgia, memories, common
sense, acceptance of life, of aging, of watching the next generation take over
for ours; all of these things seem more intense to me when I have the time to
reflect upon them. It does not make me sad; it’s more that I register my tiny
place in the scheme of things, in the universe, and my small contributions to
the life around me. I have to say that things feel right with the world when
you know where and how you fit into the scheme of things. It’s good to get
perspective.
Fjord view from the cottage, with our wooden boat (mid-picture) |
Sunset at Nesoddtangen and the docked passenger ferry |
Wildflowers that my husband picked |
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
A lovely poem by Walt Whitman
I wandered lonely as a cloud
I wandered
lonely as a cloud
That floats on high o'er vales and hills,
When all at once I saw a crowd,
A host, of golden daffodils;
Beside the lake, beneath the trees,
Fluttering and dancing in the breeze.
Continuous as the stars that shine
And twinkle on the milky way,
They stretched in never-ending line
Along the margin of a bay:
Ten thousand saw I at a glance,
Tossing their heads in sprightly dance.
The waves beside them danced, but they
Out-did the sparkling leaves in glee;
A poet could not be but gay,
In such a jocund company!
I gazed—and gazed—but little thought
What wealth the show to me had brought:
For oft, when on my couch I lie
In vacant or in pensive mood,
They flash upon that inward eye
Which is the bliss of solitude;
And then my heart with pleasure fills,
And dances with the daffodils.
That floats on high o'er vales and hills,
When all at once I saw a crowd,
A host, of golden daffodils;
Beside the lake, beneath the trees,
Fluttering and dancing in the breeze.
Continuous as the stars that shine
And twinkle on the milky way,
They stretched in never-ending line
Along the margin of a bay:
Ten thousand saw I at a glance,
Tossing their heads in sprightly dance.
The waves beside them danced, but they
Out-did the sparkling leaves in glee;
A poet could not be but gay,
In such a jocund company!
I gazed—and gazed—but little thought
What wealth the show to me had brought:
For oft, when on my couch I lie
In vacant or in pensive mood,
They flash upon that inward eye
Which is the bliss of solitude;
And then my heart with pleasure fills,
And dances with the daffodils.
Monday, July 23, 2012
A beautiful poem by A.E. Housman
LII. Far
in a western brookland
(from A Shropshire Lad)
Far in a
western brookland
That bred me long ago
The
poplars stand and tremble
By pools I used to know.
There,
in the windless night-time,
The wanderer, marveling why,
Halts on
the bridge to hearken
How soft the poplars sigh.
He
hears: no more remembered
In fields where I was known,
Here I
lie down in London
And turn to rest alone.
There,
by the starlit fences,
The wanderer halts and hears
My soul
that lingers sighing
About the glimmering weirs.
Sunday, July 22, 2012
One year later: impressions and reflections
Oslo is
quiet today; there is an unusual stillness. I went for a long bike ride earlier
and I could just feel the stillness. As though there is just an implicit understanding
that today is a day for stillness and reflection, for remembering and honoring those
men and women whose lives were so tragically lost last year in the senseless killings
on 7/22.
Last year
there was a sea of flowers in front of the Domkirke. There is talk in the
newspapers that perhaps this will happen again this year, as people seem to be
drawn to the church. It makes sense—that perhaps we seek to be present in
places that offer comfort and understanding, and some kind of sense in the
midst of all that doesn’t make sense. There will be a memorial concert later on
tonight. I am not planning on attending, but many thousands of people are
expected to participate. Perhaps I will watch it on TV.
The priest
at mass this morning spoke about the importance of taking time in our daily
lives to sit in silence and to reflect—to travel into ourselves as he put it—in
order to be challenged by the questions that silence and reflection offer us. It
makes sense to me. We cannot reflect on the things that happen around us and in
our own lives, cannot deal with them adequately, without that solitude and
reflection. Many people are afraid of solitude and time for reflection; such a
needless fear. We learn to know ourselves that way, and that can only be a good
thing.
How sad
that only a few days ago, that Colorado experienced yet again a horrific
shooting rampage in a movie theater, which killed and injured many people. How
is it that this type of weaponry ends up in the hands of those who are
hell-bent on destruction? What do gun-shop owners think when a young man comes
in with a request for these types of automatic weapons? I’m just wondering. I
am tired of hearing the often-repeated expression when these types of tragedies
occur, that ‘guns don’t kill people, people kill people’. It’s not true. Guns
purchased legally by people who have a hate agenda, do kill people, and the automatic
rifles that these murderers use kill many people in a very short time. I have a
problem understanding that these types of guns could at all be used to hunt
animals. God help the animals, is all I can say. And God help us all if we
continue to permit these guns to be sold legally. I know the argument goes that
if such gun sales are made illegal, that young men like Anders Behring Breivik
and James Holmes will get a hold of them anyway. But you know what, maybe they
wouldn’t have--maybe they would have encountered many more obstacles along the
way, and maybe the tragedies could have been prevented. I’m just wondering. And
hoping for change to the guns laws.
Friday, July 20, 2012
The vagaries of permanent resident status
When I
first moved to Norway, I had to apply for a residence permit each year that allowed me to live and work in the country, and
that involved having my employer fill out a form outlining my job description, with major emphasis on the fact that I was the only person who could fill that job. My
employer had to state and defend that there were few to no Norwegians who could
fill that position as well as I could. After three years of this requirement, which meant waiting in long lines each year at the local police station for my passport to be stamped,
I was eligible for a permanent residency permit. I had no trouble obtaining that. It meant that I no longer had to wait in long lines each year to renew my residence permit. My American passport reflected my permanent residency status with a sticker called 'bosettingstillatelse', which as far as I remember, gave me permission to work in Norway as well as in Sweden and Denmark. I was extremely happy the day I got
my permanent residency status in the early 1990s.
Recently, the rules changed, and now foreigners
are required to have a residence card that they must carry with them when they travel in addition to their passports. Here is what is stated on the Norwegian
Directorate of Immigration website:
“The residence card is
proof that you hold a residence permit in Norway. The card replaces the stickers that were previously affixed
to your passport.”
But what I need now is an explanation for why I have to renew my residence permit every two
years, as I have done now for the past four or five years, if I have permanent resident status? I have no idea if I
still have permanent resident status
or if it has changed to non-permanent for
some reason. This is what is written on the Norwegian Directorate of
Immigration website; I hope it makes more sense to you than it does to me:
“How long is the card
valid for? In principle, the card is valid for the same period as your permit.
If you hold a permanent residence permit, the card will be valid for two years
at a time.”
I have to
say that I really don’t understand this; my interpretation is that
permanent residence means two years’ residence at a time, and in my book, this is tantamount to temporary residence, not permanent. The last time I was at the Foreign Office (a few
weeks ago), the man sitting behind the information desk was impatient, rude and
generally not helpful. No answers or explanations to be gotten from him. I was
just another nuisance, another foreigner
that he didn’t feel like dealing with. Whether that was really what he thought,
I don’t know—it just felt like that. Just a wave of the hand and a disgusted
look to indicate where I should stand to wait my turn to make an appointment to
see an officer who could create a residence permit card for me with my photo
and fingerprints on it. I told them I needed it before the end of July as I was
traveling outside of Norway in August, and I was told I had to bring my airline
ticket with me to my appointment in order for me to get the card before I traveled.
So many people apparently lie about needing their card immediately, so that I was
looked upon as another potential liar. I didn’t have a problem producing the
airline ticket, so I got my card today in the mail.
I decided many
years ago not to obtain Norwegian citizenship, because it meant that I had to
give up my American citizenship, something I would never do. Norway does not allow dual citizenship, whereas the USA
does. So if my husband and I moved to the USA, he could keep his Norwegian
citizenship as well as become an American citizen if he wanted to. Generous of
my country, I have to admit, and that makes me proud of my country. I have
no idea why Norway does not allow dual citizenship, but the fact that they do
not only serves to strengthen my resolve to keep my American citizenship at all
costs. Had Norway allowed dual citizenship, then I might have chosen to become
a citizen, but I have never regretted my decision not to become a Norwegian
citizen in all the years I have lived here. It would certainly have made my
life easier in terms of not having to apply every two years for permission to
remain in this country, as is the case now, even though I did get permanent
residence status in the early 1990s. I suppose I should look into what it all
means and why my status changed (if it did), and I will. In time. Perhaps the
next time I have to renew my residence status. I simply want to avoid having to
stand in long lines to make appointments to see officers and councilors who
will advise me on what forms I need to fill out. I want to avoid sterile
offices and paper-pushing--all the trappings of bureaucratic claustrophobia.
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
Street performers in Berlin
Enjoyed watching these street performers when we were in Berlin recently. Pretty talented guys who drew quite a crowd. A throwback to my days in New York City and San Francisco, where these types of performances, accompanied by urban music, were not uncommon.
Friday, July 13, 2012
Tiergarten in Berlin
Tiergarten, a large public park in Berlin, is translated as ’animal garden’ because it
was originally designed as a hunting area for the king in the 1500s. At present, it is a lovely urban park for the
citizens of Berlin, and about the only (visible) animals that frequent the park
are rabbits. In fact, there are so many rabbits (and apparently they are so
destructive to the flower gardens in the park) that several of the park’s small
gardens are closed off with barriers to both the public and the rabbits. When we were walking
around in Tiergarten recently, I noticed mounds of earth here and there, and
wondered what they were. Now I know. Rabbits are energetic little creatures,
God love them, but their activities are destructive to flower and vegetable gardens.
I wonder if the barriers do manage to keep the rabbits out. The flower gardens
appeared to be in good shape, so perhaps the barriers are working. But for how long?
Tiergarten
is well-described on Wikipedia at this link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gro%C3%9Fer_Tiergarten, so I won’t include much more in
the way of descriptions in this post. I am posting some photos I took in the
garden. The day we were there was a hot sweltering summer day, and the sunlight
was very strong. The photos have an unusual, almost shimmering look to them—you
know it’s summertime when you take a close look at them. But the heat wasn’t unbearable,
and it was in fact nice to walk in the shadows of the many trees in the garden.
Monday, July 9, 2012
Monday morning in Oslo
Update on the weather—about the same as it’s
been the past few days. Raining today; it rained yesterday (although it cleared
up nicely last evening—long enough for me to get in a bike ride), and it rained
a bit on Saturday as well. But we enjoyed two restaurant visits in spite of the
weather, sitting indoors of course—on Friday evening at Mucho Mas for excellent
Mexican food, and on Saturday evening we found our way to Jonoe at Ringnes Park
for some excellent sushi. We’re on vacation now for the next four weeks, so it’s
only to pray for some nice weather. I hope whoever created the Higgs boson is
listening to our prayers!!
I saw an article today in Britain’s
newspaper The Guardian, that the weather in England isn’t much better than
here. Rain, and lots of it. And more to come. That’s what’s predicted for Oslo
this week. So I guess I better tackle my indoor projects that are waiting for
me. No time like the present! Still working on my photo and writing projects,
so I guess I won’t complain (too much) about the weather. I’ve sorted through
my recent photos and organized them. I’ve created a few photo blog posts and
written a few posts for my other blogs. The house is in order, household tasks are
mostly done, and now I can read and write to my heart’s content.
The USA is experiencing one of the worst
heat waves on record, with temperatures over 100 degrees Fahrenheit. I can attest to that, as I grew up in New York, and I can
only remember one or two summers in my growing up when the temperatures even
approached 100 degrees Fahrenheit (about 38 degrees Celsius) or went slightly
over that temperature. New York summers were always warm and humid though, and
it was nice to come inside to an air-conditioned home or office to cool down. Or
perhaps we ran through someone’s sprinkler to cool down; I remember doing this
often as a child. There were always some homeowners who were watering their
lawns and who didn’t mind that we ran through their sprinklers. I remember some
wicked New York thunderstorms, with intense thunder and a lot of lightning,
followed by torrential rains. And then, the storm was over and the sun came out
and life went back to summer normal. But when I talk to family and friends now
about the weather in New York, many of them say it’s nothing like it was when
we were young. So I have to conclude that either we all have collectively bad
memories, or that weather patterns have definitely changed. Whether the changes
are natural or the result of global warming, I cannot say. But I can also say
that summers in Oslo are not like they were in the early 1990s when I first
moved here, so I really do believe that weather patterns are changing. I can
remember longer periods with sunshine in June and July in Oslo, where it was
possible to go out on the boat without being drenched by a sudden rainstorm. It’s
harder to trust that there will be stable weather now, anywhere.
Sunday, July 8, 2012
Friday, July 6, 2012
Berlin's East Side Gallery
I mentioned in my last post that I would be posting some photos of Berlin's East Side Gallery, which is a 1.3 km long section of the Berlin Wall that consists of 105 paintings by artists from all over the world. All of the paintings are unique and beautiful in their own way, so the fact that I have chosen ten of them in no way suggests that these were the best. But they were ten paintings that have a dramatic flair about them, many of them are colorful, and they get their message across very clearly.
If you are in Berlin, visit this wonderful outdoor gallery. As I wrote previously, it has to be experienced in person in order to get the full effect of the immensity of what the wall represented and what the fall of the wall opened up. I normally copyright my photos, but have not done so this time, as these paintings are not mine. They belong to the world, and it was a privilege to experience them.
If you are in Berlin, visit this wonderful outdoor gallery. As I wrote previously, it has to be experienced in person in order to get the full effect of the immensity of what the wall represented and what the fall of the wall opened up. I normally copyright my photos, but have not done so this time, as these paintings are not mine. They belong to the world, and it was a privilege to experience them.
Monday, July 2, 2012
Sunday evening in Berlin
11 pm in
Berlin—sitting in our room at the Hotel Palace Berlin and listening to
the celebrations in the streets outside—cars honking and people cheering. Spain
just won the UEFA soccer cup; they beat Italy 4-0. The other night it was the
Italians cheering in the streets after having beaten Germany. Now midnight, and
the celebrations continue…….
Dinner
tonight was pasta at a restaurant called Noah’s, where our friendly waiter,
after noticing that I had finished a particularly spicy penne all’ arrabbiata
dish, commented that I had done a ‘good job’ since I had finished it despite
its numbing effects on my lips and tongue. It was very good, even though it was
probably the hottest version of this dish that I have ever consumed. Sat
outdoors and just breathed in the scent of the linden trees, and enjoyed the
warmth of the summer evening.
Spent some
time sorting through all my photos of Berlin and Leipzig (about eight hundred
or so). What would we do without digital cameras these days? I cannot even
remember what it was like to use film, although I do remember some trips in the
1990s when I took a few hundred photos using film. Many of my photos of Berlin
this week came out really well, especially photos of the East Side Gallery—a
1.3 km long section of the Berlin Wall that consists of 105 paintings by
artists from all over the world; it is located on Mühlenstraße in the Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg
district. It has to be experienced—the paintings are incredible. I’ll be
posting some photos from this exhibit shortly.
Reflecting
on our stay here in Berlin. We’ve done the Berlin Wall walking tour; what
struck me was how this part of history was also a part of my generation—we grew
up hearing about the Berlin Wall and reading newspaper articles about the
misery associated with its existence, and then experiencing the fall of the
wall in 1989. Visiting the Chapel of Reconciliation was particularly moving;
this chapel was built on the site of the old Church of Reconciliation
(Versöhnungskirche) on Bernauer Straße in the Mitte district of Berlin. The
chapel had a black-and-white photo exhibition until the end of June (we caught
it just in time) called Mauerkinder (translation ‘Wall Children’) by Thomas
Hoepker, which was emotionally-wrenching to see, mostly because the children,
photographed during the early 1960s, seemed so unaware of what horrors were
going on around them--innocents in a world that had become hell.
Thinking
about the sparrows that are in abundance in this city; like sparrows
everywhere, they are nearly tame, and will take a piece of bread right out of
your fingers. We watched a number of them help themselves to one young man’s French
fries while we sat eating our hamburgers at Burger King. Then there was the caged
crow at the Berlin Zoo, who ‘talked’ to me while we stood there and watched
him, and who followed me in his cage as I walked away, cawing loudly. It’s tough
to see birds and animals in cages; I have mixed feelings about zoos, more so
now that I am older. You wish for them what you would wish for yourself—the freedom
to live an unfettered life. I know it’s not always possible, and yet, it’s
still a wish. A wish for animals and birds, and a wish for mankind too,
especially for those individuals who suffer at the hands of dictators and totalitarian regimes.
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