Tag: First Impressions

  • First Impressions: Chile

    First Impressions: Chile

    I could fall in love with any city whose first impression is made in the morning. The wide-open streets like the open-mouthed yawn of a city waking up. Your senses are awakened to the newness of it. Crumbling building facades juxtaposed with shining modern glass feel more like a balance of progress and nostalgia than they would in broad daylight, a soft contented sigh of having it all, rather than losing one thing and not yet having gained another. Pristine waters of a river or a fountain reflecting soft morning light that masks the pollution of discarded trash, a behavior not yet overcome, and the industry of economic growth. Verdant parks nestle along or between city streets and breathe free from loiterers.

    You might see this in any city, anywhere in the world, as globalization blurs the lines between one place and the next, smoothing out the uncomfortable differences that define a place. But in the morning, the city is free from the choking flurry of humanness—ambition, despair, anxiety, complication, growth. In the morning, the city is itself something to know. A distinct being, free from the insufficient filter of communication, the discomfort of self-awareness one feels only when with other people. Taking the place of cultural difference that might cause confusion between two people, the city becomes itself in the morning, and you speak and listen unencumbered.

    I sit at the base of the fountain in front of the small Iglesia Nuestra Senora de Los Angeles, a few blocks from my hotel in Santiago, Chile. The morning is cool, but the sun is beginning to rise over the mountains forcing me into the shade. A woman leads an elderly lady across the street into the church to pray. A father pushes a baby in a stroller, their golden retriever walking faithfully alongside. A young couple on bikes passes, their spaniel off-leash runs ahead of them. A personal trainer leads a young woman in spandex through a series of exercises.

    I could be home. But I am here.

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  • First Impressions: New Orleans

    First Impressions: New Orleans

    New Orleans is a city externally defined by the influence of visitors who come under the impression that they are permitted to do pretty much whatever they want.

    New Orleans isn’t really a new place––my family passed through on a road trip when I was a little kid and, according to my mom, I hated it (“too racy”). I’m happy to say that age (and probably travel) have made me a little more open-minded, so when I had an afternoon in the Big Easy free after a work trip to Hattiesburg, Mississippi, I found the city immediately endearing. The sleepy Caribbean rhythm, French details, and music-filled streets –– “Nawlins” is a city full of character, something I miss intensely in much of DC.

     

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    Originally written in February 2011. Read more of the First Impressions series.

  • First Impressions: India

    First Impressions: India

    India is an experience in near-collision. On the streets of New York City, you brace yourself for the shoulder-check of a hurried stranger, recognizing that New York just requires a hardened version of yourself to walk the streets. In India, rather, it feels as if there just isn’t enough space for everything. You share the road with rickshaw wallahs, taxis, bicyclists, merchant carts piled high with fruit or carrying a steaming gas-powered stovetop, mangy stray dogs, sacred cows, goats climbing over garbage piles…not to mention 1.2 billion people and counting.

    You clutch the strap of your bag more tightly not for fear of danger but in the way you would clutch the safety bar at the peak of a rollercoaster when one last imploring sign reminds you: Hold on.

    You squeeze your eyes closed and wait for the collision––even so, India assaults you. Smells pleasant and rank, foreign and familiar. Cardamon, cinnamon, steamy chai tea, a pleasant potpourri of spices rising from bubbling pots––all jostle for position against the inevitable smells that accompany allowing cows the right of way on city streets. Your ears too fill with the rhythm of life here, sometimes cacophonous and other times a sweet symphony.

    This is India: an experience in duality––modernity and tradition, wealth and poverty––where all ways of life, all everyday experiences, are played out unashamedly in public. In contrast to a culture that feels, at times, overly safe or sterile, India overwhelms. So you do all you can think to do: clutch tightly the strap of your bag and jump in.

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    Originally written in November 2011. Read more of the First Impressions series. A subsequent version of this essay appeared in the Summer 2015 print issue of Darling Magazine.

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