The Day I Fell In Love With Jerusalem
Some people call them happy accidents. I like to say that the dice are rolling.
Let me first say that I am in RA purgatory. For my international readers, in college I was employed in the dormitories as a “Resident Assistant,” which at my University meant that my cohorts and I were expected to be Counselor, Police Officer, Father Confessor, Parent, Court Jester, and Ah—yes—babysitter. So I must have been a rotten RA, or at least built some really nasty Karma, as the dorm experience here has gone from bad to intolerable, and I apparently don’t have a whole lot of choices in the matter.
Well, last night I had my “encounter” with the, uh, gentlemen and their lady friends from my dorm: the first at midnight when a group of them decided to bring a hookah out into the common area and fill my room up with clouds of reek, the second at 4:14 am when they returned from wherever to continue the fun, including opening up all their doors and blasting their music at 5 pm levels. Although I understood that the act would be, with this crowd, a pariah creating act, I nonetheless thought that I would give it one try to see if talking with them would illicit sanity. Hah!
So after a total of somewhere between 2 and 3 hours of sleep, I tried to go to class, made it about a half hour until I felt myself beginning to snore (ask Sandra – this is NOT a good thing) and then promptly returned to my room during the only silence that exists – when “they” are all at class. When I woke up around 1 or 2, I knew I needed to just get away from the dorms, and so at last I did what I always do in new cities, and should have done much earlier here: I got myself deliberately lost. Disclaimer: This is not for the faint of heart.
Here’s how you do it: Hop on some form of public transportation—any form will really do. Since this is
It really doesn’t matter where I went. For the record’s sake, I walked through most of the immediate new city from the Great Synagogue down through Yemin Moshe, (the first new city neighborhood – the one with the famous windmill) up through most of the New City pedestrian shopping district, through the Shuk (market) on Rachov Agrippas, and finally ended up at the Knesset – for a grand total of about 6 hours of walking. And I fell in love.
Most of the culture shock of the first several weeks here was honestly just being so far from the real city.
B’Shalom,
Paul
Comments
I LOVE your daily commentary of thoughts and learning. What a priceless experience you are having! Keep your great sense of humor, let go and just enjoy. We pray for your continued health and happiness is Jerusalem. You are SUCH a good writer. Please continue sharing.
Love, Jo
It is funny, bit that is EXACTLY what I was tempted to do!!!! I actually said that to someone. but I think I said 5 am -- only problem is I only brought headphones with me!!!