Last but not least, the true vacation where we can relax and not worry about meeting musicians and interviewing locals. But ‘relaxing’ - slow late morning getting groceries to make an epic breakfast with fresh fruits and bread and mocha pot coffee, leisurely stroll through Old Town, long feast lunch at a nostalgic restaurant while siping Sauv Blanc, afternoon nap followed by sunset dip in the crystal clear calm Mediterranean water, all ending with an early cozy night in with take out gyros wraps and beer and endless sunflower seeds accompanied by Netflix. That’s the kind of Greek island vacation.
Read MoreAnd that was Turkey. In a nutshell. Lots of shells, cause we sure had a lot of walnuts and sunflower seeds. The smallest moments I will always treasure, just finding a market for water, just wandering and walking under the scorching sun, every confused dialogue with locals, every song and note we heard, the words we started to understand and be able to repeat. A language infused into our bodies as we existed in a space. That, perhaps, is the ‘immersing’. With all humility and respect, with acknowledgement to our limitations, we have tasted a tiny part of this foreign, now strangely familiar land.
Teşekkürler,
Read MorePerhaps I’ve always been attracted to that allure of the dangerous, the wild bordering on reckless foolishness. I like finding myself (and thus, putting myself) in bewildering circumstances where I have no choice but to magic. Aka survive. There’s always a way. That way is sometimes the people - friends, strangers, sometimes the land, the earth, sometimes only your own willpower and wit and laughter. And sometimes the way is absolutely bizarre, terrifying, awesome, insane, and it would never have been conjured if we had not played our hand with a little abandon.
Read MoreI was really moved by how welcoming the caretakers of the mosque were when we politely and carefully tread into the awing, majestic, mesmerizing space. Not knowing the customs and rules of respect is always daunting as an outsider. But they showed us that we were allowed to take the stairs to the upper levels, and the silence of the dome shaped place of prayer, honour, and rest, with its soft velvet carpet beneath our bare feet - all the formidability and grandeur of the colossal columns, the dazzling colours and infinitely repeating, unfolding, kaleidoscopic patterns of the mosaics, the spaciousness and intense awareness and calm - everything morphed together to create a spiritual space unlike any other I’ve experienced before.
Read More12 days. 4 cities. Countless moments of kindness from strangers, monumental or minute, recorded on camera or only briefly in passing. Musicians or bus drivers or grocery store cashiers. Sounds of different instruments we’ve only heard on YouTube. Familiar melodies we’ve imitated thousands of times on cello and piano now sung live by locals called together by the sound of a saz playing Âşık Veysel’s “Uzun İnce Bir Yoldayım”, crescendoing into a melancholic yet celebratory chorus as people gather to chant, laugh, and dance.
Read More“Everyone knows these songs.
You could begin the melody anywhere, and even a baby will know it and join in.”