over-thinking

As it was so carefully pointed out to me this weekend, I tend to over-think things sometimes
on occasion
when there’s a good reason
…on pretty much any day that ends with the letter ‘y’.

The great thing about friends that know you exceedingly well is that they’re there to call you out when you talk out your ass. I was having dinner with DD on Friday night and I tried to make a case to her against the apparently popular notion that I over-analyze the personal relationships and situations in my life. I spent at least five-to-ten minutes explaining that I don’t always approach things analytically, and that not every corner of my personal life undergoes detailed analysis with mini-flow charts and SWOT analyses.

Continue reading over-thinking

it’s about the people

Leaving Prague was bitter-sweet: on one hand I am ready to get home and get back to my regular life, and on the other I wasn’t ready to say goodbye to Greg and Andrea. Andy and I were talking about what we thought the best day of the trip was, and I had a tough time answering that question for myself. But I do know that the best part of the trip overall was the time spent with Greg, Andrea, and Andy. That is what makes trips like this worthwhile to me: the company you keep while exploring. It is hardly worth the time if you can’t share the experience with someone else.

I found it hard to adequately express my appreciation for the hospitality that the Brummitt’s showed to Andy and me while we were visiting them. They very graciously carted the two of us around sightseeing on several days, showing us the best places in the city and driving us outside Prague on day trips that we would not have been able to make so easily if it hadn’t been for them. Not to mention that they opened their home to us to come and go as we pleased, feeding us on more than one occasion, letting us bogart their internet, and let us generally cramp their style for a week. I am sure that they were more than ready to see us leave, but you never would have known it. They are simply the best.

And Andy is just awesome. On our last day the two of us just set out with no real plan to explore and just “got lost” for several hours. And while we were wandering the streets I realized just how great and natural that friendship is. It just flows, and his companionship made this trip an order of magnitude more enjoyable than it would have been without him.

It was a fantastic trip… now we just need to get through customs…

Terezin, Prague

Terezin 
We spent the day Friday in Terezin. During WWII, the entire town of Terezin was converted into a ghetto by the Nazis for Jews from all over Europe.  The town was built as a garrison and prison in the 1780s, making it a pretty ghastly town with it’s battlements and fortifications to begin with.  Prior to it falling under Nazi control, the town housed around 3,500 people.  At it’s peak, there were over 155,000 people packed into the town, leaving roughly about 1.5sq/m of living space per person in 1942.  At that time, roughly 105,000 of those were children.  The town was mainly used as a transfer station for Jews on their way to much worse places (Auschwitz, for example).  Only about 3,000 of the people who passed through Terezin survived the war.

We toured a museum which had some amazing artwork created by the Jews who were held captive there.  The most heart-wrenching were the pictures created by the children who were encamped in Terezin.  Surprisingly enough, there was a pretty vibrant music and art culture which sprung from Terezin and survived past the end of the war.  There is also a crematorium which was used to dispose of the massive number of people who died in the camp. Understandably, I didn’t take a lot of pictures.

Last Day in Prague
Today was our last day in Prague.  It wasn’t a pretty day, but we did get to wander through various parts of the city that we hadn’t seen.  We found our way up to the Effle tower replica, which is constructed at the same hight as the the original in Paris.  Honestly, it’s quite ugly, but the view of the city was great!  We also got to spend the afternoon in the Cafe Louvre, which is somewhat well known because Franz Kafka used to frequent it.  It was beautiful and the hot chocolate was amazing.  It is hard to describe what it is like just wondering the streets, just enjoying being in its presence. Today was one of the best days we’ve had yet.  I think that was just because I got to spend time with my friends, taking in a much of this beautiful city before we have to leave tomorrow.

Pictures
The random pictures below are just a few that I’ve taken toward the end of this week that I hadn’t posted yet. More will follow via Picasa when I get home.

Overlooking PragueHot Chocolate & Egg Liqueur at Cave LouvreDouble Fisting Communist Cola & BeerOld Town Hall at Night, PragueBone Church CrestKutna Hora Silver MinesCathedral of St. Barbara, Kutna Hora