On Wednesday, my very first full
day in Milan, I got lost. For two hours.
As I've established in the previous
post, I have extremely poor navigational skills and have shed my extrovert skin
(either that, or I've grown an introverted shell), so despite the fact I was
armed with a detailed map of Milan, it was little help.
It was my first time powering
through the metro stations alone (that morning my roommate so graciously let me
follow her down the streets, through the stations, and to the university), and
I've had very limited experience in dealing with these trains and tiled subways
that at times smell faintly of urine. I had successfully made it from the
university to the final stop near my apartment, but I managed to surface out of
the station on the wrong street. Though I was still relatively close by, it was
the biggest mistake I could have made.
Since it was my first full day ever
being in Italy, the only streets I knew were the one where my apartment is
located (which just so happens to be a tiny little diagonal side street that's
about half an inch long on the map) and where my school is. Otherwise, the
names are all jumbled to me.
So I simply started walking. At the
very least, it was a worrisome but great way to begin creating my internal map of
Milan in my area of residence. I kept walking, sometimes turning corners when I
thought I saw a street name I recognized. And I kept walking. And
walking.
It was starting to get dark (at
almost six on the dot it's pretty much night time) and I'm not yet comfortable
being out in the streets alone after dusk settles. That was when I actually
started to worry. My feet were cold and wet due to the rain earlier that day
leaving numerous unavoidable puddles splashed all over the sidewalks, and the
map tucked in my bag was as much help as all the street signs I was passing
by.
A few possibilities for help zipped
through my head. The first one was to simply stop a kind face on the sidewalk
and ask them if they knew where my street was (I figured I could get that far,
but understanding their response would have been the hard part). After only a
moment, I banished that idea. Earlier that day, I had been researching Milan and
it's quirks, things to expect, what the people were like, etc., and I had read
that the Milanese were very cold on the streets. That last thing I wanted was
to make someone feel threatened in some way and cause trouble I couldn't even
understand.
Option two was getting more and
more inviting, though less doable. I could get a taxi and simply tell them my
address and pay for the trip regardless of how far it was. If I was totally out
of my district, I would just have to eat it and deal with it; at least I would
get home safely. The only problem posed was that there were no free taxis, even
as I continued walking down several streets, looking out for any cars with taxi
hats. Isn't that the way, though? When you don't need one, they're all over,
and they hound you, but when you do, not a one is in sight.
Darkness crept over the tall
buildings, bathing everything in shadows. Lamps began to pop on.
It was down to option three.
Without hesitation, and with all
the gratitude my tired body could muster, I pulled out my phone and called my
mom. We had set up an international access plan so that if I ever needed to
call her and I wasn't in a wifi zone, I could (for an extra fee, of course). I
figured this was an emergency (I had absolutely no idea where I was in a
country where I barely knew the language, and I'm just an idiot when it comes
to reading maps) so I stayed put under a street sign as the phone rang.
She answered and it was one of the
most beautiful moments of my life. I said “hello, how are you, I'm lost!” in a
joking, cheery voice, though I really felt far from it. We got down to business
immediately. Dad joined in, too, once I told them where I was and they mapped
out my route home, telling me where to take turns and when to stay
straight.
Forty minutes and a run-up phone
bill later, I was back at my apartment. Apartamento dolce apartamento.
I hung up, wandered to my room in
the apartment, sank onto my bed and cried. I was so relieved and thankful for
the connectivity, especially after having none from Dulles to Milan, that the
pressure built up over the time I had been walking, and I finally had room for
the release. I thanked God for my safety out on the unknown streets for so
long, and also my family and the fact that I could reach out to them. Without
that connection, I am honestly not sure when I would have gotten home.
It was a more or less terrifying
learning experience, but I can now proudly say that I went to the university
and back without any issues this morning! And
I went and got some groceries! It's also sunny outside today, which doesn't
happen very often in this season, so I was being set up for it to be a good day
from the start. I managed to slow down a little bit during my travels and take
lots of pictures. They'll be up soon, if the wifi chooses to cooperate!
On an unrelated but semi-related
note, I continuously have to stop myself from speaking Spanish in order to
communicate. It's true that Spanish is much closer to Italian than English is,
but it's still not Italian. On my first day here, I was trying to confirm with
a taxi driver whether he accepted credit cards in my broken/brain fried Italian,
but I ended up saying “tarjeta de credito” which in Spanish means credit card.
Thankfully the Italian equivalent is “carta di credito” so it translated more
or less and he understood me after a moment of processing.
I think the fact that “yes” is “si”
like in Spanish doesn't help me differentiate at all. I'm slowly picking up on
my words and phrases in l'Italiano, mainly because I have to, but otherwise
because I want to. That's one thing in retrospect I wish I had been more
proactive about - learning/teaching myself the language. I brought all the
resources with me that I was using, so I can still continue teaching myself,
but all in all it's a little late in the game. Oh well. I'm just incredibly
thankful that everyone I've had to work with so far has been nice,
understanding, and known a good amount of English. It makes me feel like a
rotten little North American sometimes, but I hope they can see the gratitude
in my eyes and hear it when I say “grazie mille” because I mean it - thank you,
very much (I'm sorry I'm so inept, that's my fault, not yours, but I really
truly appreciate the fact that you didn't get angry with me for not
understanding your beautiful native tongue).
Strangely, I've heard a handful of
other international students participating in the same program as me talk about
how hardly anyone here knows English. I find myself in the opposite situation.
Everywhere I have gone and every time I've needed assistance, there has always
been someone who speaks enough English to help. Maybe it's just that I've been
pointed in the right directions by a certain Master Creator. Obviously it's not
been by my power alone.
Well, that sums up day two of my
stay in Milan (although it was the first full day). It feels like I’ve already
been here a week, and not exactly in a good way. It has been stressful, and I’m
not used to that because I do not normally allow myself to get stressed. Here
and now, however, I don’t have much choice. It will ease off soon once I can
carve these darn ruts down a little deeper so as to fall into them easier.
As always, thanks for the support
and words of encouragement!
Ciao,
V
Oh, Vicki, you are doing great handling all of these overwhelming stresses. Way to hold it together and way to reach out (phone home!) to make your way back to your sweet apartment in Italy. I'm praying for you even more, now. How beautiful to see how our Master Creator orchestrates things, no matter how many miles apart you are from loved ones and home. He truly is EVERYWHERE and is with you every moment, and He's already proved it! Praising Him for keeping you safe and sound!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Sharon! I am so very thankful for everything that's been going on here.
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