Friday, August 28, 2009

How many Americans does it take to work a bike lock?

Americans in front of the American-made KU Leuven Library

In front of the main University building

Matt going through a tunnel, post tire pop 1, just before tire pop 2

In front of the Stella Brewery

Kara, Liam, and Morgan on the high rode - I chose the low road for photographic purposes

The Group and I bike riding

Imagine this: Gliding briskly with the light breeze and the warmth of late August bringing a smile to your face. The sun – bright yellow – casts streaks of red across the sky of baby blue and white flowing clouds, illuminate the skyline of a centuries-old city. Steeples and spires thrust toward the sky, creating a pointed black skyline in the distance. Cobble stones, old and worn smooth--reflect the same character as the medieval-style architecture and buildings that engulf the narrow city streets--rattle your pedals as you pull into the 14th century convent dorm room where you currently reside. Now that is a daydream worth having.

Those distinct images were where my mind wandered as I sat outside Velo, the Belgian bike shop where I had just rented my bright orange, European-style bike--“Ginger” as she has been nick-named. Yes those were the images that quickly faded as 8 hands of 4 individuals--4 American individuals--descended on the Belgian bike lock, trying to figure out how to get the “curvy” piece to stay locked in the “straight” piece.

We figured it out; the key is keeping the key in the lock the entire time--a lesson hard earned. And as I go on, I have gotten more accustomed to the opening and closing the lock. We have ridden our bike everywhere and each time we lock it when we get to each location and unlock it when we get back, so I have literally done it a couple of dozen times. But even after 4 days, there are sometimes where I get a clean lock and unlock, and sometimes where I end up coated in oil, dropping the metal end back into the bike rack while my hand is lodged between two tire spokes--looking like a damned flat-lander.

However, the bike lock serves as a symbol for anything and everything in my newly-begun Belgian lifestyle. I think that this mentality has been my new realization since I’ve gotten to Leuven. One of my friends Liam made a comment about potentially riding our bikes on a day trip from Leuven to Brussels, but then decided that it was more of “5-months-in” activity. It kind of hit Matt, my roommate, and I at the same time: I’m not here on vacation.

I won’t be gone in two weeks and back home in no time. This is my home now, my new culture, something to respect not ridicule. I spend my time trying to fit in--not to make too much of an ass of myself, which is hard enough as it is. It’s odd to live in a country and culture for 20 years, where things become secondhand and natural, and then travel to a place where you’re constantly looking over your shoulder to make sure when you cross the street on your bike that you’re not offending anyone.

Well that was my realization and that is really what I have to tell you all for this week. The week itself has been mainly business for us. We are getting accustomed to our new living community and catching up on our sleep. We rented our bikes, started the process for opening our bank accounts, registered at KU Leuven, and took a historical tour of the city (passing by the overly patriotic, American-built, KU Leuven Library ), which was capped off with free Stella Artois and Hoegaarden courtesy of the PECS international study abroad program.

We took a bike ride exploring Leuven and the surrounding suburb--at one point we ended up so far away that we passed a sign that read “Leuven – 4 km.” The bike riding has been fun, it brings me back to when I used to ride my bike to the lower field to play stickball (Everyone says I still ride like a little kid jumping off curbs and always standing, but I guess I’m just youthful at heart).

We have enjoyed our time--minus the 2 times that Matt popped his back tire and he has in a quite literal way scraped metal all the way to the shop. Although, when he went back the second time he got the first bike off of a new line of rentals that had just come in.

On that note, I bid you a week's worth of Adieu, we are heading to Paris and the back-country of France for a week--send your blessings for good weather because we will be at the beach midway through the week. Give me a week and a half and check back in for some tales of France.

2 comments:

  1. Andrew! You are an awesome writer. I'm psyched about getting to read your blog this year! It makes you seems less far away then Baltimore!!
    So fun! Enjoy France! :)
    Love Kara

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  2. What an awesome experience! I want to go away to college!

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