433 lines
22 KiB
Markdown
433 lines
22 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: >-
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Mr. Worldwide, Pt. 1: Europe
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description: >-
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Or: How I stopped worrying and learned to love tomatoes.
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---
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## TODO
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## Outline
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- The Second Leg
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- Munich
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- No more pictures, no more tourism
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- Diet
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- Belgium
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- Brussels
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- Communism and french fries
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- Comic book museum
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- Drawing
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- Bruges
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- Beer
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- A fucking expensive fairytale
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- So cold, so scarfed
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- Camina Del Santiago
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- UK
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- London
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- Cost of museums, theft of culture
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- Dublin
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- Housing problems
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- Glendalough
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- Edinburgh
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- Reading/Writing
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- Harry Fucking Potter
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- Amsterdam
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- Pub crawl (partying vs ...)
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- Van Gogh
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- Weed
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- Sex (museum)
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- Copenhagen
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- Freedom (Christiania)
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- So many chairs
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- Stockholm
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- Tradition
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- Berlin
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- History
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- Movie
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- Prague
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- Wandering
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- Planning
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- The Third Leg
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- Munich
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- Alps, Olympics
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- Passport
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- Venice
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- Beauty in spite of tourism
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- Rijeka
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- Hitchikers
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- A strange beauty
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- Vienna
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- Riches and empire
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- A day at the palace
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- The Couchsurfing Cult
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- Athens
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- Culture
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- History
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## Munich, Germany
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On Febrary 14th I returned to Munich. Having been on the road for a little over
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3 weeks, I was utterly exhausted, and neglected to take any pictures at all. In
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fact, I hardly remember _what_ I did there, except go to the library a lot.
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Munich has a fantastic public library, which I spent a considerable amount of
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time at every time I was in town. I'd create my rough plans of where to go next
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there, as well as do miscellaneous coding and writing. I was through being a
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tourist.
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After Rome I had begun really putting my strategy of "wander around and see what
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calls out to me" to the test. By the time I was in Munich it had really sunk in,
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and the only thing which really called to me in Munich was the peace and quiet
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of the library during the day, and hanging out with Caitlin and her friends at
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night. For the rest of the trip I wouldn't take so many pictures as I had been
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doing, and wouldn't go way out of my way to see something which didn't truly
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interest me.
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After I left Italy I had begun eating differently too. Italy is, obviously,
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known for two foods: pasta and pizza, and I had a lot of those while I was
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there. At one point I had the awkward experience of an Italian guy asking me if
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Italy had better pizza than the U.S., and me having to try and find a way to
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both be honest and not seem like too much of a dick when I told him: "no". It
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would be fair to say that, in Italy, your money goes a lot farther in terms of
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quality than in the U.S.; or, in other words, their average quality is higher.
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But it's not like Italians know some secret the rest of the world doesn't, and
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you can easily find a good, crispy, thin crust, wood fired pizza anywhere, if
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you look for it.
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That was the real lesson for me: it's not that Europe has _better_ food across
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the board than the U.S., it's that even their cheapest restaurants will be
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pretty high quality, whereas finding good but cheap food in the U.S. can often
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be quite difficult. So someone like me, who's on a spend-as-little-as-possible
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budget, can still enjoy pretty good food anywhere.
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All the same, I would largely stop going out to eat at all from this point in
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the trip onward, and instead I began visiting grocery stores frequently. During
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the day I'd always have in my bag: a bottle of water, a loaf of bread, a block
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of cheese (usually gouda), almonds, and dates or dried figs. These I would munch
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on throughout the day, and for dinner I'd make something simple like pasta or
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rice with veggies and tofu. Having a kitchen would become a requirement for me
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to stay at a hostel, and many hostels have a "free stuff" section filled with
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food items people had left behind, like garlic or salt or whatever, so I often
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didn't need to go shopping at all.
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Of course, I didn't abstain from eating out _completely_. Every country has some
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claim-to-fame food item, which I'd try once or twice while there, if it didn't
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mean going way out of my way. But food wasn't a primary concern of my trip, and
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so I tried my best to spend as little as possible on it.
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Having spent a few days in Munich, recuperating and figuring out my next steps,
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I continued on... to Brussels!
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## Brussels, Belgium
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The bus arrived in Brussels super late at night, and I woke up to the voice of
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the bus driver over the intercom: "Welcome to Brussels! Donald Trump says it is
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the shithole of Europe, and he has it right!" So it was a warm welcome. I only
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stayed in Brussels for two nights; it was more of a pit-stop on the way to
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Bruges than anything. My hostel was, apparently, on the site of one of Van
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Gogh's old studios, but that fact was played up in favor of actually making the
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hostel any good. But the city was nice enough, and despite the bitter cold I
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enjoyed myself.
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{% include image.html
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dir="mr-worldwide" file="brussels-2018.jpg" width=556
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descr="Comic murals like this can be find all over the city. Brussels, 2018"
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float="right"
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%}
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Besides being the capital of the E.U., Brussels is also famous for its history
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of comics. Not just superhero comics, but also political, children's, humor, and
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historical comics too. While wandering around I visited a number of comic stores
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with huge selections, almost entirely in not-English (Belgium has three
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official languages), and there were huge comic murals all over the city.
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Brussels' comic history would also provide me with my favorite museum experience
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of the entire trip.
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The majority of museums I went to in Europe were only loosely ordered. Large
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collection museums would organize be era, and maybe by year within the era, or
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perhaps by artist. Those museums are fine for wandering around, but the really
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good museums are those that tell a story. The Escher exhibit in Lisbon, the
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Picasso exhibit I went to in Barcelona, and the Van Gogh museum in Amsterdam
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tell the story of a single person's life, and by having that focus can be really
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compelling for the visitor. Those with a more broad focus have more difficulty
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being as compelling, but the Belgian Comic Strip Center nailed it.
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The museum started with a walkthrough of how comics are actually made, from
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initial blocking, to pencil sketches, to coloring, and finally inking. It
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covered materials used in past and present, and how digital tools like
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Photoshop and 3D modeling, which allow the entire process to be done digitally
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and quickly, have changed the landscape.
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From there the museum opened up into different sections, some focusing on
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specific countries, others on a particular artist, others on a theme. Each had
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a series of wall texts guiding you through the section, not just by giving
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information on a specific piece, but giving overall information on context.
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There were sections on specific Belgian artists, famous comic characters, a
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whole section on comics in propaganda, chinese and japanese comics (_not_
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manga), and much more. There were sections on the different mediums that comics
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appeared, e.g. newspapers, comic books, and posters, and even a whole section on
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the Smurfs. Overall it was one of the most thought out, well designed museums
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I've ever been to, and it made the trip to Brussels worth it on its own.
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After the Comic Center I didn't have much else I wanted to do. I wandered
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through the tourist-y area, saw the statue of the peeing kid that's apparently
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famous, and ended up walking a long while to visit what is, according to _the
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internet_, the best belgian fries joint in the city. It was pretty good (though
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the best belgian fries I'd have would turn out to be in Amsterdam), and I sat
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down in a little plaza to eat them. While there I caught the eye, for better or
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worse, of a guy coming out of a bar, and he immediately bee-lined for me. His
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English was not solid, but that didn't slow him down in the least.
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He opened by telling me he was waiting for his taxi, and then immediately
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launched into a tirade against capitalism, in favor of communism. I told him I'm
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from the U.S. and we (mostly he) talked about consumer culture, the plight of
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the working man, and the like. After a few minutes his taxi showed up, he wished
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me a good trip, and we said goodbye. It was a fun but extremely odd interaction.
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"Are all Belgians so eager to espouse communism to random passerby?", I'd wonder
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to myself.
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After wandering a while longer I decided to just catch a bus back to my hostel.
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A woman walked by with her two kids while I was waiting at the stop, and turned
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back to tell me something, though she didn't have hardly any English to work
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with. After some struggle we managed to land on "no bus". Damn. So I walked down
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to the metro station to take the train instead. While waiting for the train I
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overheard on the intercom: "Train delay due to worker strike". Which explained
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everything instantly. The Brussels public transit workers were on strike, so
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there was no bus, and no train, and a man (I'm betting one of the workers) was
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drinking in the middle of the day, waiting for a taxi, and super primed to talk
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about worker's rights.
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While it was a funny situation, in a way, it did make my life quite a bit
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harder. Once I finally got back to the hostel I stayed in for the night, and the
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next day headed on to Bruges.
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## Bruges, Belgium
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I'll be honest and say that 90% of the reason I wanted to go to Bruges was
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because of the movie, _In Bruges_, which is one of my all time favorites. The
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movie was shot almost completely in the city, and makes a lot of fun out of
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tourists coming to see it. "It's a fucking fairytale" is a common refrain in it.
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Bruges always had a pretty solid tourist game, but after the movie it really
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took off, so that most of the other people in my hostel said they had only
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really heard of the city from the movie too.
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{% include image.html
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dir="mr-worldwide" file="bruges-pano-2018.jpg" width=1492
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descr="View from atop the the Belfry of Bruges, 2018"
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%}
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The city itself is actually beautiful. Once out of the busy tourist area,
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centered around the Belfry, the streets and canals wind around through quiet
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neighborhoods and small parks. Bruges is sometimes called the Venice of the
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North (though Amsterdam also calls itself this), due to its history as an
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important historical commercial port built on top of a maze of canals. There are
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many canal boat tours available, but I was too ~~cheap~~ poor to spring for one,
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so I took a free walking tour instead.
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"Free" walking tours are a fairly common business in European cities. The tour
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guides collect people from various hostels they have arrangements with, and walk
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them around the city, talking about whatever is worth talking about. Most that I
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took were quite good, weaving together the history of a place, its culture both
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then and now, and current events, all while giving you a good lay-of-the-land
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and two-ish hours of being out-and-about. At the end of the tour the guides ask
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for tips/donations, and most people give between $5-20.
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On the tour of Bruges our guide had pointed out a sea shell cemented into the
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pavement. This was part, he said, of the Camino De Santiago. In the middle ages
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the Catholic Church considered pilgrimage to be a suitable form of atonement for
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sins/crimes, and so many people throughout Europe were sent away from their
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towns to travel by land to the Santiago de Compestela Cathedral in northern
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Spain. Over time the various routes materialized into a network, denoted by sea
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shells or sea shell symbols, which stretches throughout Europe and which people
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continue to use today.
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Even as the guide was telling us about it I knew I wanted to do. As the trip
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wore on I talked to a few people who had done the pilgrimage, and for every one
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I became more and more convinced that I must do it.
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{% include image.html
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dir="mr-worldwide" file="bruges-canal-2018.jpg" width=1920
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descr="Canals of Bruges, 2018"
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%}
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I made a few friends in my hostel, our friendship having been forged in the
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struggle of trying to find an affordable meal in Bruges. Every restaurant in
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Bruges, it seemed, did "full" meals, where you pay a fixed amount and get two,
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three, or four courses. But the fixed amount was never lower than €45, and so we
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spent a lot of time searching for alternatives. After a lot of searching we
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found a couple places which were reasonably priced for the couple nights we were
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all there, and one of the group knew of a hard-to-find pub which made and sold
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13% alcohol beer for a few euro. After all that Bruges wasn't as unaffordable
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as it first seemed, and was a lot of fun, but it took a bit of work to make it
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so.
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After Bruges I took a bus back to Brussels, where I hung out for a while waiting
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for my next bus which would take me across the pond.
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## London, England
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Getting to London was honestly one of the most exciting parts of that trip. The
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Channel Tunnel, or "Chunnel", runs from France, underneath the English Channel,
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and pops back up in England. In the tunnel is a giant train which ferries cars
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and buses through the tunnel. Taking the Chunnel was as easy as buying a bus
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ticket from Brussels to London, and passing through three passport checks along
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the way (the UK check being the most intense passport check of my entire
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journey, for whatever reason).
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While the London Underground (The Tube, as the British call it, in their very
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endearing habit of giving everything an endearing nickname) was easy enough to
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use, though _very_ expensive, so I spent a lot of time walking in the bitter
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cold. London is a _huge_ metropolitan city, filled to the brim with shops and
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restaurants and plenty of other attractions to grab tourists. But despite their
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best efforts, none were more grabbing to me than the museums.
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{% include image.html
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dir="mr-worldwide" file="london-steg-2018.jpg" width=1920
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descr="Stegosaurus at the Natural History Museum. London, 2018"
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%}
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All the major museums in London are free to enter. This includes the National
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Gallery, exhibiting paintings and art from the world over, the Natural History
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Museum (my favorite), with its seemingly infinite halls of fossils and stones
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and pre-historic artifacts, and the British Museum, which exhibits many of the
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archeological treasures the British have stolen from other cultures throughout
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history.
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There's a significant amount of controversy surrounding the British Museum, and
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whether or not it's right for it to keep artifacts like the Rosetta Stone, and
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sculptures from the Parthenon of Athens. The argument is that the British were
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not really _given_ these artifacts by the peoples/cultures which originated
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them, and so the museum is effectively parading stolen property.
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The British Museum argues that, in fact, it's encouraging the spread of culture
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and understanding by collecting these artifacts from around the world and
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displaying them in context to each other, and that its mission is charitable to
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the cultures from which the artifacts are taken. And additionally that: "[the]
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restitutionist premise, that whatever was made in a country must return to an
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original geographical site, would empty both the British Museum and the other
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great museums of the world".
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The argument that they're actually spreading culture is pretty patronizing, as
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if the people they've stolen from don't know how to do this best for themselves,
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and as if they should obviously _want_ this to be done for them. As for the
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argument that restitutionism would empty the museum, I can only imagine a
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restitutionist responding: "Yes, that's the point". It's one thing for a museum
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to be given or loaned an item for display by another people, but quite another
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to assume the right to take an item regardless of its peoples' wishes.
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Besides some very good fish and chips, London didn't have all that much else for
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me. The museums were insanely crowded, with everyone pushing over themselves to
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fill out their selfie-with-famous-objects-bingo-cards; my hostel was weird (all
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of my hostels in the UK were weird, in fact; more on that in Ireland); and
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everything was quite expensive. I wasn't too sad to leave.
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## Dublin, Ireland
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My bus dropped me off at a small ferry terminal in Holyhead, a town in Wales.
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From there I took the couple-hour ferry ride to Dublin.
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I spent only a couple of days in Dublin, but one of those days I struggled to be
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a living human while fighting off the flu. I still managed to walk down to
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Trinity College to see The Book of Kells and the college library's Long Room,
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but the memory of it is fuzzy. I'm sure I looked as dead as the people who wrote
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those books.
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That day I mostly hung out at the hostel. Hostels in the UK have a very
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different atmosphere than everywhere else; there's a fairly bad housing crisis
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occurring in most major cities (like the three I went to), and often it's
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cheaper to live in a hostel than to rent an apartment. So the hostels I stayed
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in were filled with people who'd been there for months, some of them working,
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others trying to find work, others just lounging. But the dichotomy between
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people who were just passing through and people who were there long term made it
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a less than stellar experience. The long-term residents all knew each other and
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formed cliques, and generally took up the common spaces, so if you weren't
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already traveling with others (like me) it was pretty easy to feel excluded.
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On the second day I decided to go on a day trip out of Dublin. The city was
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neat, but I wasn't finding all that much I wanted to do inside of it. I found a
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bus company which did day trips to Glendalough, a valley which holds
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the ruins of a 6th century monastary, a beautiful lake, many hiking trails, and
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some sheep. I spent the day hiking, wandering around the ruins, and escaping an
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incoming snow storm. By the end of it all my sickness from the previous day was
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completely gone, and I slept the whole bus ride back.
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## Edinburgh, Scotland
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I left Dublin just as the Beast from the East made landfall. A giant cold wave
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brought in tons of snow and unseasonably low temperatures, stretching all across
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Europe. My plane must have been one of the last ones to land in Edinburgh,
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because for the next 2 days the entire city was completely snowed in, and most
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stores and attractions were closed.
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The tourist industry heavily plays up that Edinburgh is the city where JK
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Rowling wrote most of the _Harry Potter_ books, and you can see its influence
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clearly. The towering gothic cathedrals, castles on cliffs, old graveyards,
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dense cobblestone streets and dark alleys all feel like something right out of
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the books (though really it's the other way around). There was a cafe only a few
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blocks away from my hostel where JK Rowling apparently first started writing the
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books, a piece of trivia which the cafe has not failed to cash in on.
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The city was quite peaceful, probably because everything was closed from the
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storm, but it felt like it might always be like that even in good weather. Most
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days I'd find a spot to hunker down and draw for a while, then in the afternoon
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go explore some sight or another; the castle, the royal mile, Calton Hill... Or
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I'd go in search of decent groceries, which were strangely difficult to find.
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The city is (said to be) built on seven hills, like Rome, and between the many
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steep stairways and narrow alleys navigating them, and packed snow and ice, it
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was quite difficult to explore too far.
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While I spent five whole days in Edinburgh, I don't have much to talk about for
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it. It's probably one of the most unique cities I visited, with a lot of beauty
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and history and things to see, and I absolutely would love to go back. But
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despite all that, there was definitely a feeling a depression while I was there,
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like I was totally alone. When I got onto a plane and took off, I was more
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relieved than anything else.
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## Amsterdam, The Netherlands
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One of the first things I noticed when I landed in The Netherlands (which is
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such a strange name for a country, now that I'm typing it out) is that they have
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a sun. It's a stereotype that the UK doesn't get much sun, but it was absolutely
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a true one while I was there. There was literally cloud cover the whole time.
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That probably had to do with why my mood was down the whole time, unbenownst to
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me.
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With my extremely pale ginger self back under the sun, it felt like I'd been
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holding my breath for weeks and I was now finally able to breathe again.
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Amsterdam is sometimes called the Venice of the North. Like Bruges. Unlike
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Bruges, Amsterdam is gritty and in some places delapidated. The buildings are
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sinking into the soft, slightly-under-sea-level Holland soil, and so lean
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precariously over the streets. House boats line nearly all canals, many
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appearing abandoned. Most canals have a layer of debris and trash floating on
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them.
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Some parts of the city are littered with bars and clubs and "coffee shops",
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giving them a grunge feel. And others had wildly colored houses and quiet
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corners on the canal. And then the museum district, with the amazing Van Gogh
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Musuem and the laborynthian Rijksmuseum (those were the two I went in, there's
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like five in that little square). And still there's the red light district, with
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sex shops and cheesy tourist shit and live shows and, obviously, prostitutes.
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They each have a little window where they try to grab your attention from. It's
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kinda weird.
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Despite that, Amsterdam was probably my second favorite place I visted on the
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whole trip. Like Lisbon, the city feels real. The grunge lets you know people
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actually live there. The hostel I stayed in was really cool, and I made a bunch
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of friends. One of the nights there I confirmed a long-held suspicion: that I
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would hate bar crawls. Now I know for sure. On a different night me and friends
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went out, visited a "coffee shop", and hit up the Sex Museum. This turned out to
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be a great idea; it wasn't even that raunchy, just kind of mind-boggling.
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Amsterdam also turned out to have the best Belgian fries I've ever had, for
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whatever reason, and they ended up being my lunch almost every day. I'd grab my
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fry-cone and wander the canals, finding small corners and tucked away cafes to
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sit and read at. I wouldn't have thought that a city known for nightlife could
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also be home to so many serene little spots; nevertheless, the city is full of
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them.
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My bus out of Amsterdam was an 8 hour overnight journey which deposited me in
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Copenhagen. Before getting on the bus I killed the last of my "coffee" that was
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in my pocket, contorted myself into a ball fitting into the two seats of space I
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grabbed, and got the best sleep I've ever gotton on a bus.
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