| Brussels Fete d'Iris (Iris Festival) May 5th, 2013-Celebration of the City of Brussels (The Iris is the official symbol of the city:)) |
Let me tell you about a few interesting happenings here in
Brussels. Actually, now that I am reading this over again, it turns out it is more than “A few
happenings” but oh well, I think you will find them entertainingJ I also have some quite
amusing quotes from the boys, so keep on reading if you want a laugh J
Let me just set the scene, I am sitting at my desk in my
room on the 5th floor, the window in front of me cracked open, and
rare Belgian sunlight pouring through. In the distance I can hear someone practicing
the tuba, and then a jazzy guitar and trumpet come in. The neighbors are
practicing their jazz band again, as usual on a Sunday night. It’s like a free
jazz concert for the neighborhood of Maurice in Saint Gilles.
First of all, in the past say…3 months, I have felt my
fluency in French suddenly improve immensely. I have thought of a couple
reasons for this. One reason is somehow I have managed to meet a number of
non-English speaking men…for example, one guy I met at the train station late
one night when I went to Mechelen (a small Belgian town where I met a friend) and
I asked him if the trams were over for the night, and he said yes and said he
was going to Ma Campagne and said I could follow him if I also needed to go in
that direction. Coincidentally, that was where I needed to go, so, feeling a
little uncomfortable, but knowing this was my only way to get home, I followed
him. His first question to me was if I was Spanish (I told you earlier,
everyone thinks I am Spanish!) and we talked about our jobs and what we do. He
works at a restaurant and moved to Brussels from the Ivory Cost about 10 years
ago. Apparently, it is very difficult for young people (he’s 24) to find jobs there because there is a rule
that you can only start work if one of your parents is working. But, since his
mom was a house-wife and his dad ran away when he was a baby, he couldn’t work
there. I told him a bit about my life, trying my best to not make grammar
mistakes. He brought me to my street, and I told him thank you and goodnight.
He asked for my number, and I was a little reluctant giving it, but all the same
I did. One day, he texted me asking if I was available. I was just on my way to
pick-up Felix from the nursery, but told him he could stop by to chat while I
fed Felix before I had to pick up the boys. I had this feeling that this man
was a little lonely, and I didn’t mind a little French practice. I gave him a
coffee and we talked a bit about life as I fed the happy little Felix. Simon
(the man’s name) was amazed at how cute Felix was (like everyone is:P). He left
when I went to pick up the boys, and I haven’t seem him since. I have no
intention to, but I thought it was an interesting experience.
Another guy I met at an ice-skating rink a
while ago, and we finally made plans to meet again. He is 23 but looks like
he’s 17, from Vietnam and very friendly. He’s been living in Brussels since he
was very young and is a good connection for me since he knows all the
happenings and events going on. He also works at a restaurant as a bartender. I
went to visit him there last weekend after I went out to a movie and shared a
Lebanese dinner with my Finnish friend Sanni (one thing that is really neat
about Brussels is that you can get almost any kind of food you want, and it is
usually very good because it is the native people from that country cooking
it…Brussels is one city that is truly international!). Anyway, Minj works at a very fancy Vietnamese
restaurant, and when I walked in, everyone looked at me since technically the
place was closed (it was already 11:30pm at this point). I walked up to one of
the waitresses and asked if Minj was there, she led me to the back and there he
was, washing a bucket of silverware. Everyone at the restaurant was really
friendly and joked around with each other, like a big family. They offered me a
drink and gave me a place to sit. I chatted with Minj for a while, and one of
the other workers, a young boy, asked me where I was from since I had an
accent. But they both found my French very good J
I was proud. That night Minj walked me home since the trams had stopped. It was
quite a long walk from where we were, but we just bought some nice Peche Lambic
(peach flavored beer) and started the hike. We stopped to ask a man getting out
of a bus if he knew the way, and being very friendly, he said yes and would
bring us since he was going to a place nearby there. We talked a bit, and when we
finally reached the place, we were laughing and joking like old friends. That
is so Brussels...you just meet random people and suddenly you are good friends.
One of my very close friends here, Hieu (pronounced like “you”) told me that
Brusselsoise are famous for following, quite strictly, the rule to live the
moment and enjoy life as it happens. And you may ask why they have this philosophy...well,
it is partially due to the Belgian weather. As I have experienced in the past 2
months or so, here in Brussels, it was very warm and sunny for two days in
mid-march, and then it snowed for a week. Just last Thursday, it was 85
degrees, sunny…and the next day, 35 degrees, rain and clouds. Basically, the
weather can change at any moment. So, the Brusslsoise people have learned that
when a good moment is happening, they take every step to take advantage of it.
And that is why people here, despite the weather, are so happy and friendly.
They live in the moment, and that is how life is supposed to be lived. Let me
give you another example. Today (Sunday) the weather was fantastic. Sun,
warmth, blue sky…I went for a run in my normal place, Parc Duden, and it was
PACKED. Families, couples, groups of friends, random men on their own drinking
a beer…everyone seemed to be out and taking full advantage of the sunshine. I
took a seat on the grass to stretch a bit, and took in the events happening
around me: I see a group of friends throwing around a Frisbee, a girl and her
dad playing badminton, a man trying to hang a swing for a group of little kids
standing around him, watching in excitement, in the background you can hear
someone playing the flute, a young girl is sitting on the top of the hill, strumming
a guitar, a young couple is cuddling on a blanket, sharing a picnic, a group of
friends are playing volleyball on the court in the middle of the park, an old
man walking down the path, intently picking bright yellow dandelions and carefully
making a nice little bouquet out of them, like he thought they were the most
beautiful flowers in the world…..and then it starts to get weird. Brussels weird.
I see 4 people, 2 men and 2 women, dressed kind of in a Rastafarian style with dreadlocks,
strolling like a parade through the park, the women in front carrying a big,
old apaullstered couch over her head, the woman behind her pulling a bag on
wheels, and the men in the back sharing a wooden table with two giant mats on
it. They are steadily walking through, and then the women stops and sets down the
couch in the middle of the walking path, and sits down. The men follow her lead
and set down the table. The stay like that for a few minutes, discussing
something, then pick up their loads again and keep walking, starting to trudge
up one of the hills. One of the men carrying the table stops when they pass the
old man playing the flute and chats with him. Then he picks up the table again
and their parade keeps on going until they head out of the park…
| People enjoying the sun in Parc Royal |
| The vineyards surrounding Parc Royal |
Oh, and speaking of being in the park, about two weeks ago,
the Finnish au pairs (we usually refer to them as a group because they seem to
always be together, chatting in this quick, tongue-rolling language and 99% of
them are blonde) organized a picnic in Parc Royal, a small but very busy park
just in front of the King’s Palace in Brussels center. It was the first really
warm day in Brussels, and everyone was out. There was barely any room for us to
find a spot to spread out our blankets! But the atmosphere was lovely, with
groups of friends laughing, and singing, playing guitar…couples flirting and
drinking beers, families playing ball together. The happiness and enjoyment
filled the air, you could tell every person in Brussels was eagerly awaiting
for this kind of day to finally arrive. We had all suffered the darkest,
coldest and rainiest winter in Belgium in the past 20 years, and now we wanted
to enjoy this first sunny day together. Celebrate our survival…live the moment J
Anyway, the rule was that each person who came to the picnic
had to bring a food or drink to share. Immediately I knew exactly what I should
bring: American peanut butter. I still had a jar left that my parents brought
with them. I knew that these Finnish girls had probably never tasted real
American peanut butter before. So, I took that and a couple bananas to go with
it. When I first took it out of my bag, they were like, “You eat it with
bananas? That tastes good?”
“It tastes like heaven,” I replied.
They passed it around, each one carefully tasting a little
piece. And after each person tasted it, they declared that is really did taste delicious.
And I was proud J
First I converted a German family to peanut butter worshippers, and now my
Finnish friends…who should be next?
| The Finnish/Swedish group in the parc :) |
OK, now I have a very, very strange story. I guess it reinforces
the idea that Belgians like to enjoy life and make it fun…and, according to
this story, that even goes for Belgian police! So, the story takes place after
a Thursday night at Place Luxemburg, a big square in the EU district of
Brussels, directly in front of the Parliament building. Every Thursday, people
who work for the EU (as well as other people too…some expats and such) gather
in this square, which is surrounded by bars, to drink beer and listen to music.
Each bar has its own DJ and tent in front, and they blast music and once all
the EU people are drunk, they start showing off their crazy dance moves. I like
going there because it’s fun to meet all these people from countries all over the
world. As you walk through the crowds of people, you hear a multitude of
different languages...French, German, English, Italian, Spanish.. everything.
The other au pairs and I are usually the youngest ones there but we don’t careJ
Anyway, I was walking
home up the street to my house (I live about a half-hour walk away) listening
to my iPod and kind of dancing to myself, which suddenly I heard a police siren.
I looked up to see a police car circling
towards me and the policeman waving his arm at me to come over… The first thing
that came to my mind was that he was going to ask me why I was alone at 1am
walking down the street…but that wouldn’t make sense. There were quite a number
of people walking around actually. Maybe he thought I was drunk since I was dancing around? I
walked up to the window and he said, “Bon soir, madame” and continued in French,”Sorry
to bother you, but would you mind helping us with a joke?” At first I thought I
didn’t understand him correctly and asked him to repeat. He thought maybe I
didn’t understand the word “blague” (“joke”, in French) and tried to find a synonym.
I realized this and said, “Oh yes, a joke! Well, what do you mean?” And he explained,
in a very excited manner, that he had a friend in the club Avenue down the
street and they were looking for a random girl to call him and not say their
name, just tell him to come out of the club and that she is waiting for him
there. Then the friend would come out and find his police friends waiting for
him. Kind of a lame joke, but I was more surprised that these police men, who
seemed extremely enthusiastic about the joke, were doing this while they were
on duty! Weren’t they supposed to be going around trying to find people to save
or arrest bad-guys? I was a little hesitant about the whole thing, not because
I didn’t trust the police, but more because I was afraid I would mess it up the
joke with my accent in French... The police asked me where I was from, and when
I told them I was American, they looked at each other with faces of pure
surprise as if saying, “Of all the girls we could have asked, we found an
American! Wow!” He apologized for bothering me and said they could find another
girl, since they wanted someone who would have a French accent (it would be
more believable for their friend, I guess). And they wished me a good night and
drove away. I stood there, stunned in the street for a bit, trying to comprehend
what just happened there… All I can say now is, the only time I have ever been
stopped by a police was to be asked to help them play a joke… I’ll take that as
something to be proud of J
OK, taking a break now. More coming soon!


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