In Category: ‘beyond the border’

kiev 3 XL In Ukraine, Elevators Take YOU!

In Kiev, you lose the rules.

Rule one: Learn to stare.

Rule two: Learn to smoke.

Where does this fit into the American mind? In Ukraine I was ready to go home. In a dizzying world where nothing makes sense, there are no helping hands and the cheat sheets are 6,000 miles away.

Rule three: Shop underground.

Rule four: Question everyone thing.

The best I could do was lift my groggy head and bite back the impulse to scream. I was already marked an outlier, scrawling strange words in my book, wheezing from the endless clouds of tobacco stink. I was the one throwing the TP in the loo, smiling at strangers a little too openly, the only woman not risking everything between hip and sole.

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Rule five: Get it in writing.

Rule six: It’s not a movie.

The countdown ticked away one hryvnia at a time, our hours measured by when we would arrive in the welcome familiarty of Frankfurt am Main. One more street. One more meal. One more con to avoid.

My only defense was the Ukrainian stare, the one that proved effective in warding off one stony look at a time. It got us from the government hotel where we slept beside the gurgle and croon of a thousand horny pigeons. It didn’t save us from the sick industrial fog that bridged the city and the concrete megaplexes that striped the road in cold shadows.

We clung together in this ocean of strange, trying desperately to sync and swim. If these people are as proud of their heritage as they say, it manifests itself in ways not familiar to me.

Heart of stone. Gaze of glass. And everything, everything so far away.

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August 9, 2011 City of Love

Everyone has a guilty pleasure, and mine is Paris.

What they say about it is true: the dog poo, the price, the tourists. The Parisians. But there is so much to love about this old city that I find myself secretly smiling behind my hands when people criticize this beautiful place.

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But I waited a long time, perhaps too long, to be there with my life love. I thought that it had been a terrible tragedy that I had allowed myself to walk alone along the Seine and pass so many sweet couples sharing the scenery with a bottle of wine. There is no shame in proclaiming your love in Paris. The emotion is so thick, you can feel it. It made me cross my arms and realize all I’d left behind at home.

Despite Paris’ cosmopolitan aura, I’ve never seen the rich side of the city. Walk around the corner a few times and find yourself in a more comfortable environment… This is where all stories begin. From wet-lipped concierges and coffin-sized lifts, hotels that don’t care to impress a soul, these are the places that spark the imagination. This is where we stayed.

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In our room at the Plat d’Etain, there are no sweeping views, little hospitality and it’s as romantic as your local Office Max. But I sat in that room one afternoon simply listening to the sounds of the city filter in the window. Across the narrow twist of street was a pragmatic shoe store and the ubiquitous Parisian apartments that look positively petite until you think about what it costs to climb 6 stories with an armload of groceries.

I leaned over the sill and looked up, down, trying to fathom what kind of people that would live in such austere old buildings with gorgeous windows. They weren’t upscale by any means, but the age of these structures and their bohemian beauty are attractive to born-and-bred Americans. It’s lovely and inspiring and the patina lends an air of authenticity, not shabbiness.

The woman in the apartment across the way had hung her laundry out to dry. The sun slowly crawled around the corner of our hotel, casting an iconic shadow of our stovepiped roof to their facade. I thought about the likelihood of these clothes drying in the cold October air, and thought about the kind of hands who would hang her unmentionables in the window for all travelers to see. Are they young hands or wrinkled ones, aged beyond their time?

The next day they had not moved but to sway in the breeze; her life was clearly more fulfilling than mine was proving to be. Me, the watcher of laundry.

The lesson was clear as day: Leave your laundry behind, for there is life to be had.

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Paris is a wise soul, ancient, stately and proud of its unmatched character. There’s absolutely no wonder how so many people fall in love with this city’s bones. Had I not experienced Paris already with three different kinds of love, I could still begin to understand that there are many flavors of passion in the world: love that we feel towards one another, our families, our friends, and for places and things that we do.

Leave your laundry behind, for there is love to be had.

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March 8, 2011 Chernobyl Night

In Chernobyl, the last thing you want to be doing is hiding from the authorities in the dark.

And yet I somehow found myself doing just that, begging my heart to stop beating, wondering if this was some sort of awesome spy movie.

I sure didn’t feel awesome.

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Earlier that evening, I stood by the bed pulling things out of my backpack. We were going for a stroll in town and some divine foresight was nudging me to bring just my camera and to leave my wallet and bag in the room. I threw the strap over my head, stuffed a few hryvnia in my pocket and joined my friends outside.

Traveling lightly has its virtues.

Chernobyl-town is one of those rare grownup places with an actual curfew. Whether it was for safety or because the military doesn’t want to waste electricity (or manpower), I don’t know. We weren’t supposed to be out, so we strode through the night, flashlights off until we were well away from the occupied part of town.

In such silence is an element of unease.

The moon battled with the clouds, revealing dark, mud-filled holes in a road that was sometimes little more than a deer path. The forest reached high on both sides hiding who-knows-what, wild animals and a few stunted houses.

Finally, Arek switched on his diving lamp as we turned down another nameless road. He seemed to have a specific place in mind, but he didn’t say a word until we reached a row of bigger buildings. With my eyes finally adjusting to the dark, I could see the world painted in silver and blue like a child’s illustration, complete with insanely tangled trees and regular square shapes.

These houses were vacuous holes in the moonlight. The first one we entered had been abandoned for at least twenty years and vandalized long before any of us had ever considered coming to the Ukraine. Sweeping the flashlight across the foyer I could see the house was a fair size by American standards, which seemed odd considering the modest accommodations you see elsewhere in the Zone. There were four doorways, each leading away from the hall.

I realized then that this was not a single home, but a collection of tiny apartments.

There was nothing left here but for the occasional torn poster I could not read. Like everywhere else in the Zone, there’s a distinct edge of shock seeing the level of disrespect shown to the old life; The brick walls had actually been forcefully ruptured, as if some trigger-happy treasure hunter came through with a sledgehammer.

But you’d be hard-pressed to believe that someone living in these closets would have had much worth looting.

The familiar feeling started rising in my gut. I’d been feeling it so much recently, that wretched combination of guilt and sadness for a life that never had a choice and was swept clean away. No more. I followed the guys back outside.

Suddenly, beyond the trees was a flash of a light and the unmistakeable crunch of boots. I froze. Panicking, I watched my companions scatter in different directions. The moon was behind a cloud so I could barely see the trees we had just walked through, but I took an educated guess and dove behind what I hoped was the largest one. Traitorous branches cracked under my clumsy feet, drowning everything out for a heart-stopping second.

Everything was a little wet and a lot cold. There I crouched, ducking my chin as far as I could into my chest and turning my face away from the noise. Moonlight on my skin would be as bright as lamplight and I could take no chances.

What would happen to a foreigner caught breaking the law in a unstable nuclear zone? The possibilities flash behind my eyelids, none of them good. I’d had some experience with this type of fear on the train just days before, but that was a cakewalk compared to this. On the train I was breaking no law, my conscience was clean.

But here I was defying curfew on a military base holding a big honkin’ camera, dressed in black with no ID. Convenient, eh?

I was a rabbit cornered by the fox. I knew he was there, just around the corner and my last hope was to be ignored. Oh to be ignored! This was no child’s game of hide-and-seek. This was the real thing, and being tracked by the law was not at all romantic to an otherwise model citizen like me. My heart was so loud I knew they could hear me, and I had an absurd moment of perfect literary clarity. Time seemed to slow.

The footsteps grew closer… closer… I would not open my eyes and risk my face in even the dimmest moonlight to see what was there. They came too close, just across the way. I don’t pray, but I prayed that the wild tangle of trees and underbrush concealed any hint of my existence. The woods are huge — Surely my outline is no different than that of the other boulders on the earth!

My heart, pounding ever faster, demanded oxygen and I fought against drawing breath in one, loud, explosive gasp. The gravel stopped crunching less than ten feet away, precisely on the other side of my tree. He was listening, my fox, listening to the air.

How does he know? How did he know?!? My temples felt about to burst. Do I know enough Ukrainian to understand “Come out, now”? Is that in the phrasebook I didn’t bring?

Instead he said:

” …. Hello?”

It was Matt.

With that, I retrieved my dignity, air and my gear and we continued on our way.

I would wait for a later time, a much later day to think about how I had missed the retreat of the original patrol… and how the hell my companion had figured out where to find me.

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December 27, 2010 On Germany (Part 2)

Spangenberg is… How shall one describe Spangenberg? It’s a town so small that no one’s ever heard of it, but it stunned me to see that nestled on the outskirts is a brand-new Edeka, flags and all. To hear the locals speak of it, it’s a travesty. Even though I bear as much weight as spätzle in salt water, I tend to agree. It’s easy to shake my fist and say “Heresy! Spangenberg should not fall victim to the influences of commercial big-box consumerism!” I can sniff and say with fondness ‘I remember when Spangenberg didn’t have an Edeka.’

But alas, times change. I am one of them.

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Our hosts were very kind and, upon hearing that we had no solid plans between setting foot in Spangenberg and when we were to meet our friends in Kiev, whisked us out to Mr Travel, a cozy one-room reisebüro on a quiet medieval street. The kindly proprietor pressed some buttons and bam! We had two nights’ reservations at the hotel Carlton in Budapest, train tickets in from Frankfurt and out again.

Wow. As I said, pros.

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With that achievement, the tables were suddenly turned. Peter and Gisela were determined to show us a good time. After all, while you’ll rarely find central Germany on the top of any Lonely Planet list, Germans can sure tour with the best of them.

Hesse is never thought of as a prime vacation destination but its relative invisibility to outsiders is its greatest charm. In the depth of falling winter it is beautiful in a quiet, understated way, even gripped by fog thick enough to make SF jealous. It coats you in drizzle that turns spiderwebs into ropes of cabochon diamonds.

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Outdoors, it is very beautiful. The leaves are yellow, the air bites, and it just smells good. It brings back memories of living in a world with seasons and the mixed excitement and sadness that comes at each turn.

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Between the hazy green hills you’ll find space-age ICE bridges, forests and castles and canyons of half-timber houses on cobblestoned streets. In the quiet little villages that dot the sides, you’ll find old houses with labyrinthine doors, each a durable layer sheltering bearded, smiling faces from the outer cold. Each snick of a latch brings you closer to the heart of the home, invariably warmed by a fireplace or an honest-to-goodness old-fashioned wood stove.

And in there you’ll be seated and served what I’m sure they consider just a modest meal. But it’s full of wurst and senf and brot and käse and even though you’re vegan back home, none of that matters now. There is no such thing as hospitality in this place without these keystones of the palate. It just is.

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Breezing through towns big enough to have shopping streets and rail lines, you’ll find the usual businesses, bronze statues, government buildings and street punks… some climbing out of public WCs with their dogs, leaving you doing a double take and wondering if you somehow missed the stairwell.

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After every meal you sit in the parlor and talk. It doesn’t matter if you speak the language or not. Words come and go and moments of complete, utter confusion are peppered with flashes of perfect clarity. There is no TV, no computer, no texting and no internet. Your friends and family may call you on the… tele… phone… (but never after 9) and ladies who come to call are prepared with their hat and gloves, just like any proper lady of their day.

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In return, going to call at someone’s house is as simple as walking up the street and knocking on the door. Dropping in without a Gcal invite is clearly not verboten. Kirschsaft cut with mineral water served in crystal glasses, polished silver platters and velvet couches flanked with gold and ivory ashtrays… what, if anything, has changed in a hundred years? Stepping into the old Theune house takes you back to days when women wore long dresses and mustaches were waxed. No matter what clothes you wear, you stick out. But you’d never feel awkward when faced with their smiles and insistence that you try the chocolates.

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I was very sad to leave Hesse, a treasure trove of history and warmth and complete and utter hospitality. I have traveled to Ireland and Japan and across Europe and the States, but I have never, ever experienced a level of true heartfelt generosity like I have in small-town Germany. You’ve set the bar high, and it stays with me still.

Thank you.

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December 26, 2010 On Germany (Part I)

Germany is one of the most underrated countries to visit and I think that’s a crying shame.

I recently read some website where the author had written something to the effect of: In Germany, you’re not likely to see any tourists who aren’t German. While I know for a fact that Germans love their statistics and expect you to know the finest details about your own country, I am a silly Amerikanerinchen and admit that I am not able to prove him right or wrong.

I can say with absolute certainty, however, that Germans love to travel. Whether or not they do it within their own borders or without, tourism is the heartbeat of Germany.

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We entered the country on a rainy autumn day, coming in from the north on a late Dutch train. As we disembarked in echoey Frankfurt hauptbahnhof, my ears was sore from the dozen-plus dashes through rail tunnels. The pressure changes are shocking, unpleasant and are quite numerous on Deutsche Bahn. I suppose, however, that this is a trade-off for being one of the most efficient, timely and technologically advanced transportation systems in the world.

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Since our last visit to der Vaterland, I’d like to think that my ability to understand the language and culture is better. After all, it has been four years. But given that my most recent brush with Deutschdom was a scant few months at a sprachschule in Baltimore three years ago, I was woefully wrong.

Frau Markwordt had aways stressed that flowers were of the utmost importance on any social call if you are going to infiltrate someone’s house on a Sunday. Despite most businesses being closed in Europe on this Day of Rest, I was tickled to see that the florists were, as predicted, doing brisk business. Hefting my backpack, I ran ahead and tugged on Trav’s sleeve. Look! Look! Die Blumen! It was the same flush of excitement one gets when you’re eight and add baking soda to vinegar to get the promised explosion. It’s working! I don’t know why I was so excited, but I volunteered to go into one and purchase something appropriate for the trip (whilst being flashed most inappropriately by a female T-rex dubbed ‘Lady Giga’).

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Thankfully, Arabic numerals are the same on both sides of the pond.

Thou shalt not discuss the drive up to Spangenberg. Rather, I shalt not discuss it due to it being rather underwhelming.

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To be continued…

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December 1, 2010 Ten Months Dreaming

Edited to add: SmugMug has let me post about how this was made.

I will never lose the impression Chernobyl has made on me, although this may be the last time I create something from that place. This one was particularly meaningful because each clip brought back memories, motions and snippets of conversation.

This project was so long in the making, I cannot quite reach back to think about how the idea began. Ten months dreaming, four days shooting, three weeks editing. All distilled into three and a half little minutes.

I hope that those of you who weren’t there find this one as enjoyable as it is to those who were.

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Friends, Americans, travelers: Do not buy dust masks in Budapest.
You won’t find them. You can ask a half dozen people who live in the city, who work in the shopping district, who call themselves concierge at your four-star hotel, but they will not know.

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You will, however, be truly, utterly and wholly convinced that you can trust them, that you do not need to worry and that you’ll be in good hands. After all, they are all telling you the same things: Once you get on the right train and go to the correct area, you’ll see the hardware store clear as day.

So you make plans to “go shopping” and look up the location of the #17 tram. You find it, but no one is able to tell you where to buy tickets because their mastery of English extends to: “Ticket?”

Nonetheless, you’re resourceful so you’ll get there, and in one piece. And jittery because in order to get information about said ticket booth, you had to duck into the nearest cafe and down an extra espresso.

Hey, the espresso’s strong, dark and handsome just like the waiter.

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You can get all the way uptown where the city fades into mundane suburbia. Stores are open… but are they? It’s sometimes hard to tell.

No one really seems to care about making potential customers feel welcome, but that’s OK. You’re still looking for that dust mask, even have a snapshot of one loaded up on your iPhone. I mean, what is the Hungarian word for “P100 dust mask, usually worn when painting or exploring radioactive hospitals,” anyway?

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So no one in the shopping district can point you to (a) a hardware store that is (b) open. They can, however, point you over to a children’s clothing shop and a snowboard boutique.

(Where does one go snowboarding in Budapest?)

Well, whatever. Maybe it’s time to just find some lunch. A sandwich might stave off the creeping sense of betrayal you start to feel at the locals’ deception.

Now there’s no place to eat that seems appealing since you’re so far away from the main part of the city. But lo! Slide through a crack in the walls and suddenly you’re in the middle of a bustling outdoor market. In a land of cigarettes, spiderwebs and rat poop suddenly you’re in an ingenious tent-shaded courtyard overflowing with fruit, vegetables and flowers. The oddity of this surprise is a bit befuddling, but a couple of apples for a few forint will soothe the sting, and the palate.

The apple seller is tall and a real looker. Literally. He’s possibly the biggest flirt in the entire town and he takes every opportunity to catch my eye and smile. I have to hide behind the corner to eat my fruit. Hmm, time to close the notebook.

Hungarians are always full of surprises.

See? You never found those dust masks.

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1080046554 vxWuL XL From the Notebook: On trains

From 7,000 miles away, European trains are romantic. It’s adventure: A giant steel wyrm uncoiling under the moonlight, snaking between the wild mountains of eastern Ukraine. Folklore and myth lurk in the shadows of the forests, all while the passengers lay swaddled and asleep in their gently-swaying carriages.

… It was not at all like that.

Keleti station in Budapest could be a lovely building. For me, it was ominous and dark, a place I only ever saw after nightfall. The dim orange lights are unflattering, adding a squalid miasma to a gothic building already muddled in smoke.

Our train rolled in at Track 6 a half hour before scheduled. It looked like a ghost train, square and old with antique white letters peeling off the sides in Russian, German and French. There is absolutely nothing high-tech about this train.

We had found the polar opposite of DB.
No one got off, but suddenly everyone was trying to get on.

Outside, it’s a full moon over Hungary. It only just touches the open plains, illuminating large patches of marshy water and the regular, highly polished rails in the tracks beside us. A few strings of orange lights blink in the distance but they look far away and lack promise. It’s rural and wild out there, a place of vast unknown.

Inside, it’s hot and still. I can feel heat radiating from the pipes under the window, probably welcome in a Moscow winter but unwelcome as I sweat in my tank top. Instead, I press my bare arms agains the cold metal sill and ignore the warmth at my feet.

—-

The train creaks and thumps and clanks and sways through Hungary, a country stained blue by the moon. I can’t sleep; Every light from a passing station, every bump and screech jolts me awake. We’re going fast, though, so fast I wonder why this trip takes over a day to complete.

Finally a conductor opens our door to say “Customs.” He disappears as we sit up, leaving us to infer that he wasn’t checking, just warning. Indeed within minutes the train stops again, slowing past a man with a flashlight.. checking for stowaways, perhaps. This stop is much longer. People are walking outside in the dark, blending with reflections in the glass. Under and around we feel thumps and bangs and hear orders shouted out. I do not know if they are searching the train or readying it for the new gauge of track. I do feel like a rabbit being hunted even though I have nothing to hide.

The border guard appears at our door, a very stern, slender man in uniform with deep eyes and impressive cheekbones. Wordlessly he asks for our passports. He wears some sort of box hanging from a shoulder strap and he is able to simply press my passport to a rectangular indentation in the side, which reads it. He’s an expert at rapidly paging through the visa stamps and finally adds one of his own. The seal looks like many of the others from Europe but has an “H” in the stars and a locomotive in the corner.

—-

The thumping under the train has stopped and I wonder what’s next. It’s so quiet here now, no sounds from the other passengers.

—-

Another stop shortly over the river. Chop (Чоп) is an ominous name for a town, indicative of what is to come. As I press my cupped hands to the window I see several people in military garb emerge from the station. They boarded the train and have, I presume, entered separate cars. The first man absconded with our passports, which sets my nerves ringing.

Through the outside door comes the insistent blip of a sonar or radar machine. I am so tired but the tension chokes me. I feel closer to understanding what it’s like to be in hiding, pursued by authorities beyond our control. Without understanding a word, I feel guilty and afraid. This is how to develop a cheerless country.
A rough, heavy old man blocks the light coming through the door and questions us in rudimentary English why we are here. I’m a prisoner, cornered in my cell with no place to go. He makes us fold away the beds and open our bags, but to my relief it’s only a cursory inspection. He leaves and I am left feeling violated.

Meanwhile our train is banging, clanging and shifting. We lurch four feet in one direction and then the other. In the dark I can just make out four-legged cranes rolling on the tracks and arching above us like steampunk spiders. It looks and sounds like we are being eaten by an enormous mechanical dragon, a feeling amplified by the obscurity of the situation.

I’m fighting a pounding headache aggravated by smoke and we still don’t have our passports. With the discomfort and worry, it’s impossible to sleep. As if to add insult to injury, our neighbor is snoring.

Time crawled slowly through the rocking, clanking, jolting, shunting (how many adjectives can you have for a Soviet train?). Border guards came to return our passports with as much warmth and consideration as before, and it was almost worth the scare. What a great stamp!

—-

With that I lay down. Even with two layers of padding the lower bunk is very hard; if not aggravating one bruise, it created another. The train stopped many more times in the night, sometimes rousing me to a slightly more conscious state but I remember little but black shadows and white snow. The Carpathian Mountains. When I sat up again the clouds were stained pink with sunrise, and the hills were green and low. Best of all the full moon still hung in the air between the hilltops, ready to float away.

When the train turned a corner, it was a surprise to see how long it was — suddenly the act of moving the train to new wheels was much more impressive and real. Curiously, our car which was formerly the last in line was now the first. Somehow they have turned our world inside-out and upside-down! The idea of having so many people on this journey is unreal, as we are so isolated in our compartment.

—-
The neighboring room contains a young mother with straight, dark hair and a little girl who must be 4 years old. I know her gender not by her haircut or clothing, but from the doll she clutches to her chest. She cries when her mother leaves to use the bathroom but otherwise is all laughs and incomprehensible jabber through the thin walls. But she is shy and the suspicious, guarded expression under her bangs belies her young age. I think there must be two girls next door: the one I see and the one I hear.

She is the last child I would see for a week. Once we reach Київ we disembark into a world of old men, vodka and rust.

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November 2, 2010 Liquidation

Say one word, “Chernobyl,” and you’ll get one of two polarized responses:

  1. Why?
  2. Wow.

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No matter what they say in public, nearly everyone has a interest they do not want to admit. Morbid curiosity and a secret fascination to the radioactive wasteland, a town locked in time.

Me, too.

I let my breath out after the third (and last) checkpoint, thankful that our paperwork was all in order. Military personnel in the Exclusion Zone have a certain hard, cutting look to them that unmistakably marks them for what they are. Even if their drab camo uniform and official arm badges were somehow overlooked.

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The trees really do obscure every surface and nature is slowly eating away at the evacuated town of Pripyat. Through the windows of our vehicle I could see just one white hammer and sickle floating high above our heads. An ancient lamp post decoration. I was to learn later that it was probably the only emblem of the sort that remains in town due to its proximity to the guards. Everything else bearing the implications of Soviet rule has been looted, scrapped or sold.

I’m not new to this. I’ve spent the majority of my 20s doing questionable things in questionable buildings, stepping carefully across squishy floors and ascending swaying ladders. I thought this would be the grandaddy of all explorations, a testament to all the things I’ve learned over the years. I thought I would be ecstatic and high on the treasure trove of opportunities once we passed that last gate.

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And I stood there, feeling confused and empty and slightly guilty. I dedicated a lot of time to prepare for this trip and backpacked halfway across Europe to be there now. Selfish, I thought, So many people would give everything they had to have this chance. What’s wrong? Out came my camera and I begun to go through the motions, but something wasn’t right.

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Where are the people? Where have they gone? I know this answer, but I was not asking the obvious question. The buildings of Pripyat have stood empty for almost 30 years and the 50,000 residents were evacuated just days after the explosion. But as the stories go, they left everything behind, not expecting to be gone for more than a few days.

In that time, countless others have passed through these same spots, looting, stealing, breaking and displacing. Reactor 4 was the greatest elephant in the room, but it was those faceless individuals who erased the memory of those people from this town.

No wonder I felt cheap. There is no one left here, and I understood at this late hour that I was here looking for the people the whole time, not the buildings. A building is a building no matter what letters are written on the walls; it’s always the same. And at that moment things got better.

There may be little left to indicate the people who lived here, people who laughed and smoked and swam and learned to read, write and sing songs about the great Soviet leaders. But I did the best that I could to make sure that even this far away from their existence, they would not be forgotten. At least to me.

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At the same time we craft our own memories in the tracks of the rich, black earth. We have to capture those moments too before the trail grows cold.

See it all: Chernobyl, Pripyat and Polish boot camp.

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April 21, 2010 The Longest Day

From east to west. Chase the sun, follow the sky.

I dreamed of a girl who loved so much, her own life could not contain her. Her fingers lingered on the door and she felt the old paint flake beneath her touch. She slipped into the dawn, unable to shape her goodbye into words.

The longest day passed in a wash of yellow grass, rolling hills and red mountains. She smiled. The prairie wind embraced her with a warm breath of dry, crackling air, pushing her ghosts away. And as the sun sighed its final breath and sunk slowly into night, lights emerged out of the ribbon of road. The dazzling crown of the city.

We followed the same path, but there was anticipation, uncertaity, tiredness, redundancy and impatience. The hours of whirring asphalt resets your sense of awareness and – suddenly! – we have a new way to measure time. Hours become minutes, minutes become days, and as we slink closer to the end, each hour blurs headlong into memory.

Corn. Cows. Transport. From the first moments of this journey we were shown with disturbing clarity (and regularity) how these things underpin our civilization. Ideas borne in books became reality. Truckers, farmers, drivers and every pit stop between them was the lifeblood of our economy.

I’d never known this man before, the John Smiths who toiled the land and believed – how he believed! – in meat and television and god. And as we stole farther from our home (their homes) he came with us, for we were partners along the beaten path. Always, evermore, and each day, we became the minnow among the big rig fish.

But this is not about me. This is not about us. This was once just a dream and our journey became it.

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