Friday, August 24, 2007

Self-Mutilation and the Superfluous Man.

Moto GP/Hungarians

Between being sociable and scrambling to find pickup hockey in the summer, I haven't written in a substantial while. However, this is not for a lack of eventful happenings. When we last left our hero (laff laff), he was walking the Brno 15k. Since then, I've returned to the new rink twice to skate; it's the best ice I've ever gotten to play on--really hard and smooth. The skate was a lot more crowded than the ones in Prague, but there was still plenty of room. The European rink provides a lot more space and room for finesse, but it also makes public skates a lot less chaotic. Needless to say public skates are also substantially faster than in the ice-barren backwaters of Arkansas. The new rink is near the old rink. The old rink had its roof cave in sometime in the last two years, and it has since been overrun by gangs and other people of suspect character. It's quite a place, even from a distance...I didnt' really want to go very close.

I actually made it to the charity game I mentioned in my last post. It was a lot of fun, and you could see the players' unbelievable skill, but you could also tell that they were just having a good time out there. It was no contact, and the final score was 13-10. Jagr's Team won (big surprise). It was awesome, however, to see so many talented players in one place. As something of a non sequitur, the girl at the hostel reception desk told me I looked like Ales Hemsky, one of the goal scorers for the Unicef team. Cool. The beer was also ludicrously cheap...you find me a stadium in America where the beer is $1.50. Go ahead. I dare you. When you find it, tell me so I can go camp in the parking lot.

Ice continues to be elusive. Public skates are only on weekends here, and I'm beginning to get a little frustrated. Part of me wants to stay in Brno beyond my ten days, because I feel like I must have overlooked something, but about 80% of me knows that it's in my best interests to just move on. It is summer, after all. There's not an empty football pitch in this whole town, and they're rife with walk-on games. There's a word for this whole situation, and methinks that word is dammit. By October I hope to be up to my ankles in pucks and ice shavings. (I should be careful what I wish for. I hear Poland is very cold, so the ice shavings might just be in the rink parking lots.) It's getting a shade colder every day, I think, which means soon I'm going buy another several pounds of luggage...winter clothing. Just what the Iditarod dog needs: another ten or fifteen pounds in the sled.

I've met even more characters in Brno than I did in Prague...and I was in Prague a solid twelve days more than I've been here. A brief cross-section of the stories:

Unbeknownst to me, Brno is the host site of one of the biggest motorcycle races in Europe. 100,000+ people (and it seems like just as many motorcycles) clog the city and turn it into a tumult for three days, and then leave a wake of burning rubber and empty beer bottles. And I thought this place was quiet.
The first night of the Moto GP, I met Vidor, Adam, and Mike, three Hungarians who told me that I'd never want for food, lodging, or things to do while I was in Hungary. I took them to a decent Czech place. I swear to god they drank nothing but absinthe the entire time they were here.
My Italian friend Matteo and I made a habit of getting delicious (if slightly dodgy) Gyros from a 24 hour place almost every night he was here. I've been trading idioms with other English speakers. An Aussie injected "Dodgy" into my vocabulary, I gave her "sketchy" as a present from the good old U.S. of A. I now also end many sentences with an interrogative "yeah?"

Lightheartedness aside, Matteo and I also saw something really alarming a couple of nights ago. I was keeping Matteo company while he smoked on the porch, and a guy came up to ask him for a cigarette. Matteo obliged, and he offered us a pull of his vodka. As I was taking him up on his offer, I noticed the kitchen knife in his right hand. A warning flag went up, but just as I was about to go inside and retreat from the possibly unpleasant developing situation, I noticed his left arm was dripping blood. Three straight, deep lines were carved into his arm, and the trail behind him was long and wide. I used my still fairly regrettable Czech to ask him what had happened, and he told me he'd done it to himself, over a girl. I guess it turns out my Wilderness Advanced First Aid (WAFA) training was useful after all. I went inside to the first aid kit, and got the poor bastard a beer while I was at it. I was trying to tell him what to do as I dressed his wounds, but here my Czech abilities came to a grinding halt. Fortunately he spoke some English. He said he wanted to stay with us or go back out, since his father was on his way to pick him up. He went on to say that he hated his father. We kept him busy until dear old dad arrived. I thought it was probably better that way, since I was sure his family must have been worried sick, and the hostel probably didn't want blood-covered sheets. His father, brother, and girlfriend arrived in trio, and what followed was not for me to see. So that was my harrowing experience and good deed for the week. I think I'm actually still a little shaken up.

I also recieved an employment offer from an entrepreneur who's traveling around the world making contacts. It was an odd conversation, because what started out as a friendly conversation quickly became a job interview. My interview skills are good as ever, I suppose, because he wanted, in a few years, to make me director of American operations for Transcendental LTD. I told him I'd see.

Some of you may notice that one of my friends from Prague, Dominque, dedicated a song to me on facebook...Drinking Beers with Mom. This hearkens back to a fun Prague anecdote and foreshadows a fun Brno anecdote. One night I took care of my British metal buddies in Hostel Ujezd, and Dominique watched most of it and helped too. She said I was like the Hostel's "Drinking Mom." I've come to be pretty thrilled about this title, frankly. Last night I helped a big guy stand up and not pass out/throw up in the hostel hall. My legacy continues.

I think I'm more or less done in Brno; I feel stuck in a rut here, even though it's beautiful and peaceful enough. I think it probably doesn't help that the hostel is closing, and being in a place where things are ending and winding down generally puts me in a bad mood. I spent two hours today debating whether or not to leave the hostel. Oblomov lives. I think it's time for a change of scenery. I'll see what Bratislava has to offer; Slovakia, from what I hear, has a more favorable exchange rate, and lots of culture strewn among awful Communist buildings. Wish me luck.

Brno's ONLY Oblomovistic Drinking Mom,

J. Brandon Harris

5 comments:

GMarc said...

I am so happy to read "oblomov lives." Remember the classes on The Cherry Orchard and the use of oblomovismas a term that summed upthe Russian fatalist character as found i the inhabitants of the play. It sound like moving on will be a good thing. I look forward to your commentary from Bratislava. BTW how on earth did you manage to write Russian in cursive? It's really difficult for me to tell the difference between double "ells" in a word and the lowercase "tee." I feel like I'm having to learn cursive all over again. BUT learning a new language certainly is stimulating. Thanks!

fräulein ashley said...

hey josh-

glad to see you are alive and kicking (ass) in europe! slovakia should have some amazing hockey, and bratislava is a rather charming city if i say so myself. i can't say i thought the exchange rate was superb, having gone there directly from budapest where everything is dirt cheap, but i can say that i thought the money was very well designed and made one of my favorite souvenirs from my study abroad days.

anyway, i can't wait to read about your next adventure! perhaps i'll even see you somewhere along the line.

love,
smashley

GMarc said...

Okay, I know you didn't ask for it, but out of curiosity I googled "Bratislava history" because I wanted to know "Why should this be important to me?' and here's what I found:


Milestones of the history of Bratislava

5000 years before Christ - the oldest archeologically confirmed settlement
(neolithic)

100 years b.C. - Celtic oppidum of the Boya tribe, trade and administrative
center, probable center of Celtic empire in Danube region

1st - 4th century - Under Roman Empire

5th - 6th century - arrival of Slav tribes

623 - 658 - Samo's Empire, the first Slav state form

9th century - The Great Moravian Empire, military, religious and administrative
center existed on the Bratislava Castle

864 - the first mention of Devin - Dowina, fortress on the bank of Morava river
(Fuldish Annals)

907 - the first written mention of Bratislava - Brezalauspurc
(Salzburg Annals). The name probably originates from the name of
Slav duke - Braslav.

10th-11th century - the castle becomes border fortress of Hungarian Kingdom

1000-1038 - Coins with "Breslava Civitas" (City Bratislava) were minted.

1052 - German king Henrich III took the city and the castle.

1189 - Meeting place of the third crusade led by Friedrich I. Barbarossa

1291 - City got the privileges from king Andrew III.

1302 - Rudolf, Austrian ally of Karl Robert, took the city.
- The first appearance of city seal.

1376 - Guilds got their statues from the city.

1405 - Zigmund the Luxembourg gives the rights of free royal city to Bratislava,
in 1430 also the minting privilege and in 1436 the coat-of-arms.

1432 - Husites attempt to take the city; conspiracy was disclosed.

1464 - Mathias Corvinius confirms the city rights; in 1465 he founds
Academia Istropolitana - the first university in Slovak area.

1468 - Mathias Corvinius gives the city the right of sword.

1526 - After the Mohacs battle Hungarian parliament appoints in 1536 Bratislava
the capital of Hungarian Kingdom and the residence of the parliament.
Ferdinand I. Habsbourg was appointed the king.

1536 - The first crownation in Bratislava - Maximilian I.

1606 - City was besieged by the army of Stefan Bockay, leader of the uprising
against Habsbourgs.

1607 - protestant grammar school was founded.

1619-1621 - The city and the castle were occupied by Gabriel Bethlen, leader
of another anti-Habsbourg uprising.

1626 - archbishop Peter Pazmany invites Jesuits.

1671 - Members of anti-Habsbourg conspiracy were judged. Mikulas Drabik,
priest, was executed.

1698 - Russian Czar Peter the Great visited the city.

1704 - Soldiers of Rakoczi took the suburbs, but Eugene from Savoy managed
to keep the city.

1705 - The first journal, Mercurius Veridicus ex Hungaria is published

1710-1711 - Plague epidemic kills 3800 people.

1714-1749 - Mathias Bel, polyhistor, known as "The decoration of Hungary"
was rector of protestant grammar school.

1721-1722 - The first newspaper "Nowa Posoniensia" was printed.

1741 - Maria Theresia was crowned.

1762 - Six years old W.A. Mozart gives a concert in Palffy palace.

1764 - Since 1764 a newspaper "Pressburger Zeitung" was published.

1775 - The city walls were destroyed to allow the expansion of the city.

1776 - The first city theatre was opened.

1780 - The first manufacture was opened (cloth production).

1782 - Number of inhabitants reached 29223.

1783 - The city is no more the capital of Hungarian Kingdom.

1783 - The first Slovak newspaper "Presspurske Nowiny" is published.
The first Slovak novel of J.I. Bajza "Rene mladenca prihody
a skusenosti" is published.

1784 - The General Seminary was opened. Royal Academy was moved from Trnava
to Bratislava.

1787 - A. Bernolak, a student of theology publishes the first norm of Slovak
language (Filologicko-kriticka rozprava o slovenskych pismenach).

1803 - The Dept. of Czechoslovak Speech and Literature was created and
led by prof. Juraj Palkovic.

1805 - In Prima's Palace a peace treaty between Austria and France was signed
(known as Bratislava Peace).

1809 - Napoleon's army besieges the city. Napoleon visits the city.

1811 - The castle was burnt.

1818 - The first steam boat "Carolina" comes to the city.

1820 - Nine years old Franz Liszt plays in de Pauli's Palace

1829 - Ludovit Stur, leader of the movement for national consciousness
of Slovaks, starts to study on the protestant university.

1830 - The last crownation in Bratislava (Ferdinand V.)

1840 - The first horse railway from Bratislava to Svaty Jur.

1843 - L. Stur and his friends agreed on the codification of Slovak language.

1845-48 - Stur publishes Slovenskie narodnie novini and Orol tatranski.

1847 - Opening of the last session of the parliament.

1848 - Ferdinand V. signs the so-called March law - bondage was abolished.

1848 - The first steam train comes from Wien (Vienna).

1850 - Railway to Budapest was opened.

1856 - The first gas-works were built.

1873 - Dynamit Nobel factory was built (today Istrochem)

1884 - The first electric illumination of the streets, the first telephone
exchange were built.

1886 - The City Theatre building was finished - today's Slovak National Theatre

1891 - The first bridge over Danube was opened.

1895 - Tram lines were opened.

1913 - 79 houses under castle were burnt by the big fire.

1914 - Bratislava-Wien electric train line was opened.

1914-1919 - Elisabeth University, predecessor of Comenius University.

1918 - 27th October - Slovak National Council was created.

1919 - 2nd January - Czechoslovak army takes the city. Bratislava is now
official name of the city (proposal for "Wilson's Town didn't pass)
which now belongs to Czechoslovakia (population 83000). Comenius
University was founded.

1926 - Bratislava radio started broadcasting.

1930 - Population reached 123000.

1937 - 6th October - Demonstration against fascism.

1938 - 8th October - Bratislava became the residence of autonomous Slovak
government.

1939 - 14th March - Bratislava becomes capital of Slovak State.

1943-48 - The tunnel under the castle hill was built

1944 - 16th June - Allies bombard Apollo refinery and the western part of the
city.

1945 - 4th April - The city was liberated by Soviet Army.

1946 - Villages Devin, Dubravka, Lamac, Prievoz, Petrzalka, Raca and Vajnory
became the parts of the city. Population 191354.

1948 - First films were made in Bratislava.
25th February - the political overthrow of Communist Party. Communists
take the executive power.

1949 - Slovak Philharmony was founded.
1951 - Slovak National Gallery was founded.
1953 - Slovak Academy of Sciences was founded.

1953 - Reconstruction of Bratislava Castle started.
1956 - The first TV broadcast.

1959 - Gallery of the City Bratislava was founded.
1960 - Slavin, monument of thank to Soviet soldiers, was built.

1961 - The city has 241796 inhabitants.

1961-75 - Ruzinov habitation with 30420 flats was built.
1967-75 - Karlova Ves habitation was built.

1962 - Slovnaft refinery was connected to gas pipeline Druzba leading from USSR.

1965 - Bratislava Music Celebrations were established.

1968 - 21st August - Invasion of Warsaw treaty armies to Czechoslovakia.
30th October - At Bratislava Castle, the Federation Law was signed.

1969 - Bratislava became the capital of Slovak Socialist Republic.

1971 - Cunovo, Devinska Nova Ves, Jarovce, Rusovce, Podunajske Biskupice,
Vrakuna and Zahorska Bystrica became part of the city (302119 inhabit.)

1972 - The New Bridge was built, with cafe on the pylon.

1973 - Started works on Petrzalka habitation.

1984 - Number of inhabitants reached 400 000.

1985 - Highway Bratislava-Malacky (-Brno, Prague) was opened.

1988 - 25th March - Police violently scatters peaceful demonstration
of Catholics.

1989 - September - Bratislava has the first e-mail link to Internet (via EUnet).

Anonymous said...

I finally got unlazy and created an account so I can post comments here.
From the name, Transcendental Ltd. company sounds like they would work mainly towards something along the lines of downloading our brains into a hard-drive so you could have eternal life or similar practices. That or they are going to open low-cost dentist offices across the world. Either one sounds like a golden opportunity.
Also your description of the bus station as Bizarro World Purgatory Land reminds me of basically of how I felt in the nightmarish layover in The New Dehli Airport, except I would say that the New Dehli Airport had a lingering air of hopelessness which would place it closer to limbo. I bet watching a cop and a drunk play a street hockey match was both surreal and amusing.
Finally, I think the Moscow Scowl has a better ring to it. Try it out for a few days, if you don't like we'll take back, no questions asked.

sperky said...

Hey Josh, I have been enjoying your blog and all the entries. Sounds like such an amazing adventure.
Funny thing about working for an airline and who you meet. I was bragging about you to one of my pax that was going to Moscow, turns out he is the C.O.O. of Hockey Canada and would like to hear from you about your trip, and what you are finding about hockey there. I gave him a bit of your background, as I know it and he gave me his card. Send me your email address and I will send you his contact info. Heck, who knows he might be able to hook you up with some contacts that could get you some good ice time, maybe not but it could be interesting.
What an awesome experience for you. We are all very proud and excited for you and this opportunity! STAY SAFE!!! and keep us up to date.
BIG HUGGS and kisses!
Love
Auntie M