Monday, September 22, 2008

Evening on the Haidplatz: Theo

This happened on the same day as the unicycle event, but I didn't get a chance to write about both yesterday. If you don't want just a nice little encounter story, don't bother reading.

I got home by bus at around 16:30. I was really hungry, but it was too early to eat any sort of dinner. So I had a very small bowl of müsli and then headed out to the Haidplatz again to practice poi. I go outside on the street to practice very often because 1) there is plenty of room and what I'm swinging won't hit a ceiling. 2) I have no full-length mirror in my room, so being the clever, resourceful little thing that I am, I stand in front of dark shop windows outside and use the reflections to practice form.

Towards the end of about 1.5 hours later, I noticed an old gentleman standing a ways behind me in the reflection. This is nothing new, since people often pause for a moment out of sheer, momentary, "What the..." when they pass by. However, he lingered for a while, as the occasionally on-looker does. When I finally stopped briefly to take a break, I heard a single applause behind me, and I turned to see him grinning and clapping his hands. I thanked him, because you always acknowledge your audience. It doesn't matter how badly you think you might have done.

Juggling/skill toys are natural conversation starters, so it's exactly what happened. He asked me about what I was doing, and I explained poi, its Maori origins, etc. He told me he was overall impressed with how graceful it looks. (Let's ignore the fact that while practicing, I usually smack myself with the poi numerous times every minute).

He was genuinely interested, but big drops of rain suddenly started falling, to the point of being too heavy to ignore. We both agreed to dart inside somewhere, and he led us to the Goldenes Kreuz Café just a few steps away. (Such a coincidence -- Do you remember Herr Beckers?) He asked if I'd like a coffee, and he waved it off and insisted on treating me when I told him I hadn't brought my money with me. I took a tea instead since I don't drink coffee.

We continued talking, and I spent an evening in great conversation. The old gentleman's name is Theo, and he even insisted on "Sie können mir Du sagen" right off the bat. (For those who don't speak German, "du" is the familiar form of You, which was odd to me in this case because I'm not used to saying "du" with someone 40-ish years my elder. I mean, you wouldn't say, "Hey, 'sup?" to your grandfather).

The cafe was unfortunately closing soon afterward, but the rain stopped and he suggested continuing conversation on a walk to the Danube. It was nice outside, and we would have been kicked out soon anyway.

We walked down to Steinerne Brücke and all the way to the other side in the Stadtamhof -- or in other terms, about half a mile. We talked the entire way there and back about so very much, more than I could comfortably fit in even two or three entries here. He had this extraordinarily good impression of me, which made me sort of embarrassed, but not really in a bad way. I also improved some German (as you invariably do when you actually use a language) since he corrected me and frequently gave suggestions of alternate, more colloquial wording to things that I was trying to say. Very helpful.

Ah, but what a romantic idea it is, meeting a stranger in a city of Italian streets, engaging in conversation for an entire evening over tea and coffee and a stroll across the famed Blue Danube itself. These are surely storybook encounters.

5 comments:

S said...

Why is it that when I go on a study abroad trip, my encounters with the locals generally involve getting catcalled or yelled at, or dancing with creepy old men whose only English seems to be "more sexy! more sexy!" and you... you get beautiful walks with lovely old men? *grumbles in jealousy*

Zhela said...

My country: 1, Your country: 0.

;)

S said...

No arguments there, my friend.

Michael said...

hahaha. soo, i'm always confused by du. it's very frustrating when you accidentially duzen someone or siezen someone incorrectly. i accidentally said Sie to one of my cousins over the weekend and his mother (english speaking) was very flustered for a minute. she carefully explained to me that Sie was only for people you want to hold at a distance or don't feel close to. as if i didn't know this... but it reminded me that it is often just as bad or worse not to use du when it is appropriate as it is to use it with someone you don't know. very weird. i need to discuss this more with my friends here...

Zhela said...

Ohhhhhhhh my gosh. You have to practically... keep a tab or something sometimes! For example... at the university, it can occasionally be really hard to tell if someone is a student or a professor. So then you always use Sie when you're not sure. So half the time, the student you're talking to is like, "Whoa, just du's fine. You're makin' me feel old!" Then the other half of the time, you're like, "Dammit!, was she a du or a Sie??? I don't remember!!!" Meanwhile, you're quickly about to refer to them in your conversation and your brain can't keep up :P .

But it's all kind of fun anyway. Um. Sort of.