There was nothing to keep me back in
Minnesota. I had the world to explore. So a magazine ad that promised
work in Europe was all it took for me to pack my bags and sprout
wings. One week after graduation I was on an Icelandic Air prop to
Paris. The
adventure had begun.
When I got to Belgium, I found the job
center and marched into their sparse quarters. One hundred and
seventy five dollars had guaranteed me all the thrills of living
abroad. The promise was a job working in a hotel in Amsterdam. (sex,
drugs, and rock & roll). But reality only offered a job in a
laundry in Danmark (soap suds, hot towels, and boredom instead)
Being the world traveler that I wasn’t,
I asked “Where is Denmark?”
They said to “just head north until
you run into the Baltic Sea, cross it and you’re in Danmark. Your
job is in a small town laundry eight train stops out of central
station, Copenhagen.”
Undismayed, I took their job offer and
a train ticket for ports north.
My first night was spent in some
unnamed hostel in central Brussels wondering what I had gotten myself
into. My ubiquitous bravado had disappeared with the smelly sheets
and strangers snoring in my ears. My fellow travelers in that dorm
room were all the usual suspects; teens and twenty-something’s. Our
common bond was a lust for travel and taste for adventure. But no one
told me about communal living.
The next day I met Snow White.
Around the breakfast table that morning
were three wandering Jews from Israel (their description, not mine),
a couple of Australians (no surprise there), a ruddy-faced kid from
Scotland and myself. And the girl.
I don’t recall a lot of details about
her. She was blond, I think. She was beautiful, that I remember. And
she had on this white turtleneck sweater that she filled out quite
well. Recollections of our collective conversation that morning
became a blur. But I do remember being quite taken back by her casual
comment that she was a puppeteer, she was from Canada and she was
never going back home again. She certainly made an impact on me, not
so much for her beautiful facial features or swelling sweater, but
rather her confidence of purpose.
Snow White had left someplace Canada
and wasn’t going back home again. She was going to travel Europe
and find work as a puppeteer (I never knew there was such a job). And
yet even as she talked about her vague plans, I couldn’t help but
believe that even if she didn’t find work as a wooden doll
manipulator, she would find satisfaction in living abroad, and loving
her dream. She was poised, confident, and ready to take on the world.
I was just looking for Danmark.
My first and only roommate had arrived
at the laundry only days before me. Animal was a chain-smoking
college dropout who somehow managed to snag a basement apartment of
some random house nearby. He offered me a corner cot and a burner on
his hot plate. It was a tolerable living arrangement since he spent
most of his off-work hours at a local bar and I could read in a
smoke-free environment if only for a little while. He disappear-ed
for parts unknown after a couple of weeks and I was left in that
dumpy basement sans toilet, sink, and shower.
A genuinely nice person was Maria. She
was a young married woman who worked alongside me at the laundry. She
only spoke Danish and Spanish. I only spoke English and barely
discernable Spanish. She became my link to all the gossip, trauma,
and drama that was going among the laundry staff. Being forced to
speak only in Spanish was a wonderful exercise for me in sign
language, perfecting a broad smile, and a keen ear for
Danish-Spanish-English dialect. We got along famously.
A more worldly companion was a guy from
Canada. I can’t remember his name. His first words of advice were:
“Always have a Canadian patch on your backpack and say you’re
Canadian.” Back in ’67 the Vietnam War was in full swing and
Europeans didn’t much like Americans. I took his advice and
remained Canadian until I boarded my flight home months later.
I don’t remember a lot about him
other than the fact that he was living with a Danish family in a huge
house by the sea, he could use their car whenever he wanted, he
worked at the family factory, and they had a daughter who liked him.
A lot. Jealous, me? My eyes were green whenever we were together.
He and I took a train to Berlin one
weekend and got off in East Berlin by accident. Luckily no one
stopped us as I strolled down the boulevard taking pictures of
military installations.
Another time we spent a weekend with
two university women who lived on the coast. We rode around in their
mopeds, went to their University classes, drank too much beer, and
listened to the Bee Gees (an Australian group) singing about
‘Massachusetts’ over and over again. I remember being utterly
amazed at the juxtaposition of our respective cultures, attitudes,
and varied interests all melding together in harmony with that one
song.
I was invited back for a weekend alone
but declined. Probably for the best. I think she would have taken me
‘around the world’ and I had only gotten as far as Danmark thus
far. Another metaphor.
Tina was another lost soul much like
myself. She provided the intellectual stimulation that neither broken
Danish nor a library card had been able to fill. At that point in my
tenure in Europe, I had read every book in the English language
section of the Copen-hagen branch library. Yet it wasn’t enough to
dispel the growing loneliness I was feeling inside.
I can’t remember how I first meet
Tina. I think she was a nanny or housekeeper in some neighboring
village. She was originally from Tucson and how she ended up in a
village outside of Copenhagen, I have no idea. I’d go over to her
place at night and we’d end up talking half the night. Cheap wine
or beer, whatever was around, fueled our rambling essays on life back
in the states, the drama of family issues, and the simple joy of
com-panionship between two strangers, each lost in their own issues,
in some Scandinavian village half a world away from our own.
Tina eventually made it back to Tucson
long after I had left Europe. We wrote to each other for a couple of
months. Each of her letters was full of sadness and angst. I think
after awhile it got to be too much for the both of us and we quit
writing. I still have her letters. No idea why I kept them?
I do hope Tina found what she was
looking for and some semblance of happiness in her life. She so
deserved it.
The laundry work was growing
intolerable. Food was sketchy and I think I was getting malnourished.
And my loneliness kept growing. One morning nature jump-kicked my
indecision about staying or leaving. I stepped outside and found six
inches of freshly fallen snow on the ground. Shocked at the harbinger
of Minnesota trailing me all the way there, I asked a friend if it
snowed a lot in Danmark. He laughed and I quit my job and stuck out
my thumb. The south coast of France seemed appealing. Snow free, I
was told, and bare breasts besides.
After I left Danmark and began
hitchhiking South, I kept thinking about that hostel back in Brussels
and all my wonderful memories of that place. Even hanging out at a
gypsy camp outside of Paris didn’t quell my desire to get back
there again to try to recapture those first initial tastes of
wanderlust alongside Snow White.
I finally made it back to that hostel
in Brussels and learned one of life’s most valuable lessons. You
can never go back again. Foolishly, I had thought I could recapture
some of those wonderful feelings I had the first time around. But the
staff had moved on, a new collection of wanderers was different from
my Jews and Australians and Scotsman. And, of course, she wasn’t
there either. The love of my life for one day at the hostel and the
source of so many midnight fantasies had vanished forever.
I realized then that you can’t go
back and recapture something as vapid and nebulous as feelings and
emotions emitted in one brief moment in your life. Those feelings are
like
children of another time and place who
have grown up, matured, and are now gone forever
But I’ll remember Snow White, if only
in my imagination, and what it was like sitting across from her for
that one brief morning in some forgotten hostel in faraway Belgium.
She was my dream fantasy, a woman idealized and yet only attainable
as an imaginary poster on my basement wall next to Farah.
But who knows, somewhere in the world,
there could still be a very lucky puppet.
2 comments:
I wonder what the economics where then that a laundry in rural Denmark had to seek laborers from as far away as the US? I am enjoying your stories.
Jerry
I found it fun to listen open a 2nd tab in my internet browser and play the song "Massachusetts" by the BeeGees while reading the post... having thought that I knew every BeeGees tune back and forth, it was a wonderful new experience both to hear the song for the first time AND be transported to a scene where it was heard for the first time so many years ago. Thanks Denis! Keep up the posts, I'm hooked. Here's a link to a YouTube video of the BeeGees playing "Massachusetts" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XWYefe9EzI
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