Friday, December 25, 2009

Buone Feste!

A short video card...



It's been an incredible year for us. After spending the last 30+ years in the Seattle area, we relocated to Italy. The changes in our lives have been both dramatic and subtle. I've tried to capture the transition in this blog, but it's hard to capture the feelings and effects of leaving your jobs, home, family, friends, and country and moving half-way around the world.

We are very thankful to all the people who have helped ease our transition. Our families and friends have been incredibly supportive and some of them have even consented to visit us in Italy to help alleviate any feelings of homesickness we might suffer! We had visits this year from Jim's nephew Mike and his wife Tina, Jim's sisters Alice and Marilynn, our friends Keith and Shay, and Jim's former boss and our friend Charlie. And next year's roster of visitors is already starting to fill up, so we have a lot to look forward to in 2010.

We are also very thankful to the people here who have helped us in our transition. The friends that we've made through Jim's work have been very kind and eager to help both Jim in his new job and us in our new life in Italy. Jim has nothing but good things to say about the people he works with.

The women who I've met through the International Women's Club have also been invaluable in our transition. An active group, they offer many activities, including Italian conversation classes, cooking classes, and field trips. In addition, they are a great resource of information: best doctors, restaurants, market stalls, gelaterias.... It's made the transition a lot faster and a whole lot more fun.

Finally, we must mention Letizia, Francesca, and Mattea, three generations of a wonderful family that we are lucky to call our neighbors. From the first day we moved in, they have been willing to help us, whether it is translating for us when the repairman comes, teaching us how to harvest olives, or inviting us to their home for dinner. (Even their dog Kruk is a good neighbor. He and Bruno like to get together and croon. We speculate that they are singing a love song to Bella.) We couldn't have asked for better neighbors. Without them, I think we would feel isolated at the end of Via Prulla.

We hope that you and your families are all healthy, happy, and enjoying the holiday season. All the best in 2010!

Pace e buone feste!

Sunday, December 20, 2009

SPQR

Looking outside the house at the fresh snow on the ground, I find it hard to remember the warm days we spent in Sorrento and Rome in early October. I do remember that I liked Rome more than I thought I would and the Amalfi Coast a little less. Overall, the trip was fantastic: Jim took his first vacation in over a year, we began our explorations of southern Italy, and we traveled with two of Jim's sisters, Marilynn and Alice. Traveling with them can be described in one word: laughter. Whether it's chasing geckos around their hotel room or posing for photographs with ancient statues, they both bring a lighthearted and laid back approach to seeing the world, while still appreciating the incredible art and history we were experiencing.

So Saturday morning, we dropped the dogs off at the kennel, picked Jim's sisters up in Florence, and drove the 6 hours to Sorrento. We listened to a gripping audiobook about Ed Viesturs mountaineering exploits while Jim drove us through Naples in the dark and the rain. It was probably the wrong thing to listen to because when we finally reached our hotel, our hearts were racing as much from the story as from the crazy southern Italy drivers. The hotel was simple but had wonderful views across the bay of Naples. It also came with a hotel clerk that spewed information like lava from nearby Vesuvius. From Sorrento, we took the train to Naples to visit the National Archaeological Museum, which has amazing exhibits of Roman statues, frescoes, and mosaics. This is a world-class museum that although badly in need of a dusting is jam packed full of artifacts from Pompeii including the finest mosaics I've ever seen. It also houses the Farnese Collection (Cardinal Farnese became Pope Paul III): room after room of Roman sculpture, mostly copies of Greek originals that were unearthed in excavations around Rome during the Renaissance. Sadly, the Egyptian collection was closed during our visit.

Also from Sorrento, we drove along the Amalfi Coast. Despite a fantastic lunch in the small village of Rapallo, the drive was disappointing. I imagined a long, rocky coastline with a road that clung to the cliffs above the sea. That was all true, but the only reason it was long was because there were so many cars and the traffic was stop-and-go through each little overrun village. The scenery was stunning, but there are too many people trying to share too small of a space. I'd like to see more of this area, but perhaps from the trails in the hills or from the seat of a kayak.

If the Amalfi Coast was disappointing because it was smaller than I had envisioned, the opposite is true of Pompeii. The scale of the place is hard to describe. Our legs gave out on the rocky, uneven roads and sidewalks before we could see the entire site. Pompeii, which was sealed up by the 79 AD eruption of Vesuvius, is a well preserved window into Roman life. The mosaics, frescoes, courtyards, chariot-width roads, amphitheatre, baths, brothel, bakeries, fast-food restaurants... all paints a picture that you can't find anywhere. Large ruins remain in Rome, such as the Coliseum and Forum, but Pompeii shows you how middle-class Romans lived their day-to-day lives.

I didn't expect to like Rome. I expected to tolerate its crowds, its noise, its Vespas, but I loved it and can't wait to return. Marilynn rented a small apartment outside of Rome, which worked out perfectly. Each day, we'd ride the train into the city and visit any number of blockbuster sites. The Coliseum, magnificent. The Pantheon, timeless. Michelangelo's Pieta in St. Peter's Basilica, a tear jerker. The Vatican Museum, opulent overindulgence by a long line of power mongering and outrageously wealthy popes, but an extraordinary collection, nonetheless. The Sistine Chapel, soul stirring. The list goes on, but the one place we hadn't visited before that took our breath away was the Borghese Museum. This small museum houses some extraordinary art treasures, including many of Bernini's works. The museum lets 200 people enter at one time for a 2-hour period. If you get out of synch with the other 199 people, you can be alone in a room with a masterpiece, such as "Apollo and Daphne," and marvel at how Bernini captured Daphne's metamorphosis into a laurel tree, her fingertips transforming into delicate leaves of white Carrara marble.

SPQR is seen throughout Rome (it's on every manhole cover in the city). It is the latin abbreviation of "Senatus Populusque Romanus," the senate and people of Rome. Western politics, religion, law, medicine, philosophy, and culture owe much to the Roman Empire. Spending some time in Rome helps make that connection. (And if you can't get to Rome, or even if you can, watch the HBO series "Rome" to see what life might have been like around the time of Julius Caesar in all its gory details.)

More photos of our trip.