Friday, November 28, 2008

On Thanksgiving

The exciting parts of yesterday started not to long after I'd dragged myself out of bed, pulled on my school uniform (no, I'm not posting pictures. Not yet, anyway), and was midway through making breakfast, coughing gently all the while. It was possibly this coughing that prompted my host mother to sleepily poke her head into the kitchen to inform me that I'd better go back to bed, as I'd been coughing badly in my sleep and she was taking me to the doctor this afternoon. I protested that it was just a head cold - admittedly a head cold that'd hung on for a week or so, and didn't seem to be getting any better. Host mother wasn't having any of that, put the milk back in the fridge and sent me back to bed.

Later that afternoon, she and Host Dad bundle me into the car (wearing two T-shirts, two sweaters, and a parka) and drive to (the inaptly named, as it turned out) Universal Hastanesi, or Universal Hospital. Where I present my insurance card to the triage secretary, who promptly hands it back, shaking her head. I point to the phone number on the card, indicating that she should to call that number. The insurance that Rotary exchange students are required to buy is taken everywhere. Nope, they won't call. Why? Because it's an international number. Yes, of course it's an international number, I'm an American exchange student and my insurance is from the US. This is "Universal Hospital," what do you mean you aren't authorized to make overseas calls? Look, it'll take two minutes, just call the number. Please? No.

I call my Rotary adviser. She talks to my host mom. My host mom barks in Turkish before digging out her cell phone to call a friend who works in Radiology. Radiology Friend and her supervisor come find us. They talk to the triage staff. They go and find the manager of the triage staff. Nope. No can do. Rotary advisor curses over the phone. "Your insurance is valid in Bangledesh, for heaven's sake," she says. "This is ridiculous. What if you were bleeding or something?"

"Yeah. I know."

Rotary advisor sighs. "Amy was in the hospital with dystentary earliler this year. Let me see what hospital she went to. They might be easier to deal with."

In September, Amy came down with a particuarly nasty local version of Montezuma's Revenge. I'm glad my sickness is nowhere near that serious. Host family and I spend the intervening minutes exchanging glares with the staff of Universal Hastenesi.

Rotary advisor calls back. "Amy was at Florence Nightengale Hastenesi. Mention her name when you give them the card so they can check their records. Good luck."

It's a short drive to Florence Nightengale, and once there, the process is remarkably fast. The insurence is no problem. Amy? Yes, they remember her. Copay? Deductible? No, of course not. Need to see an ENT? Certainly, he's right upstairs. Want to see what the inside of your nose looks like? We have a handy endoscope right here!

My host mom and I joke that, now that she's seen the inside of my nose, ears, and throat in close detail, we have no secrets anymore.

In the end, they diagnosed a common cold, advised rest and fluids, and wrote a prescription for some (delightfully fizzy!) cold medicine. Well, that was comparatively easy. Also, the guy working the Emergency Services desk was cute in a David Tennant kind of way, but without the skull. Fortunately.
From the Royal Shakespeare Company's current production of Hamlet.
Image courtesy of cerysromana.livejournal.com

From the hospital, we made our merry way to a local mall (this city has malls the way some cities have, oh, park benches. I've never heard of so many Swatch stores per square kilometer), where Host Mom and I stopped at a pharmacy to fill the prescription and from there swung by a Starbucks. Yeah, I know. Drop it. "Where's host dad?" I asked.

Host mom stirred her coffee. "Grocery shopping. Do you want a brownie?"

Yes, in retrospect, that was the best possible way to distract me. The brownie was good, too.

Once we got home, host parents hustled the groceries into the kitchen before shutting and locking the kitchen door.

Well. That was unexpected.

I tapped on the door. "Can I come in?"

My host mom opened the door a crack, grinning fit to be tied. "No. We are being sneaky!"

I started to clue in when the guests started arriving an hour or so later. There was probably a smell to give it away, too, except that I was so congested it was a miracle I was still breathing at all.

The roast turkey on the table, though, was a dead giveaway.





Same for the mound of mashed potatoes, the roasted vegetables piled around the turkey, the tureen of pumpkin soup - sweet honey mustard, they made pumpkin soup. My dad's specialty, which I'd mentioned in passing maybe a week and a half ago, and they remembered enough and cared enough to make it. And tracking down a turkey couldn't have been any easy feat, either. And there was pilav, and dolma, and carrot salad, and probably more that I'm forgetting. Sweet roast pumpkin with walnuts for desert with Earl Grey tea.



I'm not going to say that I cried, but I will admit to tearing up a little. The only thing missing was the Macy's parade on TV, and let's face it, there are only so many times you can watch a giant Snoopy balloon drift past buildings before it loses its thrall.


As at every Thanksgiving, I gave thanks. But I don't think I've ever meant it more.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Of course

I have been in this country for just over three months. I have learned many strange and wonderful things:
  • Hookah is in fact pretty boring
  • Traffic in Turkiye obeys the Cartoon Laws of Physics
  • Pomegranate trees look pretty silly when in fruit
However, there are somethings that I am simply never, ever going to remember:
  • Doors of commercial establishments open inward
  • Stair treads are roughly half an inch taller here than in other parts of the world I have traversed
These latter two have inflicted bruises. You'd think I'd remember them by now.

Saturday, November 15, 2008

Attack of the Killer Vegetables!

I think that Lela was amused, if not terribly surprised, when, having been sent to the corner market for bread and yogurt, I came back with bread, yogurt, the world’s largest cabbage, and a sheepish grin along the lines of “He followed me home. Can we keep him?”


Is this, or is this not, the most humongous cabbage you’ve ever seen in your life? You could play regulation basketball with this sucker. And they’re all like this. I vaguely recall a biology teacher attempting to convince small snot-nosed freshmen (including myself) that back umpteen million years ago, the Earth was richer in oxygen and things simply grew bigger: ferns the size of Douglas firs, turtles that could peer through a second-story window. I do vividly remember an illustration of a badger the size of a Ford Focus.

If these cabbages are any indication, monster badgers are just around the corner. Keep your eyes peeled.


This is Lela in the pictures, by the way. She's pretty awesome.

Friday, November 14, 2008

Le Grande Bazaar (or something like that)

When they decided to call it “the Grand Bazaar,” they weren’t kidding. Actually, same goes for when they decided to call it “the Covered Bazaar,” (guidebooks use the term interchangeably), but frankly “covered” has a decidedly less impressive ring to it. Seriously, which one is going to get your attention?

A: “Hey, let’s go to the Covered Bazaar!”
or
B: “Hey, let’s got to the Grand Bazaar!”

Yeah, it’s going to be “B” every time for me, too. Unless it’s really hosing down rain.

I have no idea how extensive the Bazaar really is, mostly because I haven’t thoroughly inspected my guidebook that closely, and for all I know, I missed an entire section. But I can say this: it’s big. Big on the macro scale. And positively labyrinthine, to the extent that the paranoid little voices in your head start whispering furiously about OSHA and firetraps. Or maybe that’s just me.

Incidentally, another set of voices start thinking about how Lara Croft should be able to have a pretty wicked fight/chase scene here. There’s stalls hawking everything from massive nargile contraptions and precious jewels (or so the signs would have it) to daggers and antique pistols (inoperative, one suspects). Come to think of it, this one might be unique to me, too. Huh.

Anyway, the strangest thing is that if you didn’t know the Grand Bazaar was there, you just might miss it. I got off the tram at the correct stop, and stood on the sidewalk, trying to stare in multiple directions at once. Surely one would expect…well, grandeur, or at least signage, for something called the Grand Bazaar.

I looked for a hotel, but didn’t see one (when lost, find a hotel. The concierge are usually more than happy to help. Sometimes they’ll even give you a map). I tried my second most-preferred method, Follow the Obvious Tourists, but was unable to definitively pinpoint anyone as an out-of-towner. I loitered near a juice stand for a few minutes, feeling pretty stupid and wondering what would happen if I asked the guy manning the kebab station “Bazaar nerede?” when I saw a discreet stone arch, nearly camouflaged between the T-shirt stands, money-changing stations, and Prada knockoffs that form around tourist draws the way that atolls form on reefs. I took a peek.

Oh. So this was where all the grandeur was.

The walls of a seemingly endless hallway were lined with jewelry stalls and recessed stores. Salesmen in suits stood in the doorways. I took a deep breath and stepped in.

Here’s the thing about shopping a bazaar: it’s like running a gauntlet. You will not make it through unaccosted. Chuck Norris could put on his best “Don’t Mess With Me” face, adhere it with Gorilla Glue, and play the Walker: Texas Ranger theme for good measure and he would not make it ten yards through the bazaar without smiling offers of conversation and apple tea from salesmen looking to butter a potential customer up. That’s the other thing about a bazaar: all the salespeople want to be your friends. They want to know where you’re from. They want to give you tea. They want to show you this rug, this necklace set, this statue. They’ve never shown anyone else; it’s only for you, mademoiselle, only for you.

Although they probably wouldn’t call Chuck Norris “mademoiselle.” You don’t get to be a merchant in the Grand Bazaar without a decent sense of self-preservation.

Needless to say, it’s exhausting.

Having no set agenda nor sense of direction, I wandered aimlessly for a few hours, dodging boys with tea trays and particularly enthusiastic merchants: “You! Pretty girl, where are you from? Finest silver! You! Madmoiselle? Why do you not speak to me?” I walked in circles more than once, doubling back when a hallway dead-ended or emptied into a surly-looking side street. In many cases, the stalls and shops continued beyond the roof of the bazaar, lining the streets for blocks beyond. Some streets contained only costume shops; some, only leatherworkers. Inside the bazaar, some merchants recognized me as I passed for a third or fourth time. A few waved. One boy, who must have been about my age, grinned and said, “Hello again, wandering lady!”

If only I’d needed an elaborately mosaiced lampshade such as he was hawking, I would have bought one from him right there.

Ultimately, I bought a hair clip and a pair of earrings, but only from merchants who didn’t seem to care; they sat in their stalls reading a newspaper and looked surprised and gratified when I pointed to an item and said “Kaç para?” (How much?). The man I bought the earrings from was kind enough to explain how to get from his stall back to the tram, as well. By that point, I’d been in the bazaar for several hours and was ready to head home – but had no idea at all how to get back to the side I’d entered from.

I admittedly took no pictures while there – didn’t even bring my camera. Nothing says “Pickpocket me! Pickpocket me!” like speaking pidgin Turkish and brandishing a fairly nice camera. Which isn’t to say that I won’t take pictures in there eventually; I’ll just wait until I can get someone with a nicer camera to go with me. This works under the same principle as the hobbit and the dragon parable: you don’t have to outrun the dragon, just the hobbit next to you.

…Hey! HannahSam! Want to come to Turkiye?

In the meantime, the Internet has kindly coughed up these images. They don’t do the Grand Bazaar justice – don’t even come close, actually – but they do give you some idea of the scale.




Yeah. It’s pretty cool.

There is a moral to this story.

ALLOW ME TO PAINT YOU A PICTURE WITH MY IMAGINATION BRUSH.

Supposing you are walking home from the bus stop.
On the sidewalk!
It is roughly 8:00 pm.
There are streetlights.
While you are wearing a dark sweatshirt, you are nonetheless clearly visible because you are by happenchance texting while walking (a skill you have, incidentally, only recently mastered) and your phone glows bright enough to be seen from space.
Suppose you should hear the distant whine of a motorcycle behind you!
And see its approaching headlights coming up from behind.

DO YOU:
  1. Despite being roughly ten feet away from the road (this is a wide sidewalk) and despite the fact that said road is completely clear of all other traffic, take a running leap for the nearest ditch on the off chance that the motorcycle is on the sidewalk?
  2. Look cautiously behind you to make sure that approaching motorcycle is in fact on the road and not, say, driving on the sidewalk?
  3. Keep walking in your merry way, comfortable in your knowledge that the universe is a sane and rational place and there is no earthly reason why the motorcycle would be driving on the sidewalk.
If you picked option 3, I am sorry. You have just perished. Or, in my case, escaped with a minor bruise after getting sideswiped by a handlebar going approximately 3,457 mph (at a conservative estimate) and abruptly acquired gray hair. Option 2 would have been a much better choice, although at the speed that the sucker was going, you'd have been better off with option 1.

Such is the life.