Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Facing Down My Demons

Russia is forcing me to face my demons one by one, head-on. And well, the demon of the day is my future. I can only speak and think of it in vague terms for so long. Extensive education and travel have high opportunity costs, and I can’t put off thinking about my future indefinitely.

On my outing to Zvenigorod the other day with Professor Kollmann and his wife, who is also a professor, I picked both professors’ brains by asking a lot of questions that I preferred not to ask but that I knew needed to be asked. For example: Is it stupid of me to think I’ll be able to find a job in Russian area studies? What are my odds of actually getting my foot in the door at the State Department? Is a master’s degree in Russian Studies even worth anything? What if I change my mind and decide I don’t even want to do Russia anymore?

Both of them had lots of advice to give, which left me feeling both relieved and muddled at having so much information spewed in my general direction. Most importantly, at least in my opinion, they advised me to always pursue what I like and what interests me. According to Jack, if I do this, the rest will fall into place. He says that jobs and opportunities have a way of presenting themselves and/or falling into one’s lap. This was music to my ears, since it seemed to imply that I don’t really have to put forth a great effort in order for good things to happen to me.

Our discussion about the State Department was a little less reassuring. Being the idiot that I am, I just assumed (which I tend to do way more than I should) that the State Department has a “Russia office” in DC where I could sit contentedly for the rest of my life researching the country I love/hate. However, in reality (there is a great divide between my reality and the reality), I would be working for the Foreign Service, which as a rule requires that you move around between various countries and DC every two years or so. The chances that the State Department would send me to Russia are very slim. Just because I have expertise in Russian does not mean the State Department would send me to Russia or that it would even care that I specialized in Russia. The State Department does not require that its employees come in with a specialization in any area; it provides all the expertise and language skills necessary for you to work in any country. As a beginning diplomat, I would probably be sent to Africa anyway. So the bottom line is: if I want to work for the State Department, I shouldn’t even bother getting my master’s in Russian Studies or in anything else. The State Department has no hard and fast rules as to what I should have my degree in or whether I even need a master’s degree. So why should I waste all this time studying in Russia, busting my ass learning this frustrating language, and then spend another two years racking up debt for a master’s degree? I could just take the Foreign Service exam now and, assuming all goes well, become a diplomat at age 23.

Another important question is whether the life of a diplomat is for me. Would I be comfortable uprooting myself and traveling to a new place every couple of years? What if I wanted to start a family? I know it’s a little early to think about that, but I do have to consider these things, since my career choice will have a long-term impact on my life.

The older I get and the more deeply entrenched I become in this Russia stuff, the more serious the question becomes of just what my job prospects are. I get the feeling that I am soon to reach a point of no return. I’m investing a lot of time and money in this Russia thing, and I can’t just turn around and say to hell with it if I get cold feet. Like I said, the opportunity costs are getting higher and higher as time wears on, and I’ve got to start thinking seriously about my future. Professor Kollmann said that I can’t go wrong if I continue to follow my heart. I hope he’s right.

On another note, I’ve been thinking lately about by educational trajectory since high school. As a high schooler aspiring to go to Stanford, I was incredibly idealistic and exasperatingly naïve. I wasn’t quite sure what I wanted to do in life, but I knew that I wanted to be great and do great things. I wanted to change the world. I felt that I could do anything, if only the powers that be would let me into Stanford so I could do my thing. I wanted to heal the sick, feed the hungry, eliminate corruption, inform the ignorant, blah blah blah.

Now, I know that I am a Negative Nancy and that I hate on myself way more than I should. I know that I have done some really awesome things in my short time on earth and that I have an exciting, challenging, enviable life. But I can’t avoid looking at myself with a critical eye. Here I am, Buff Bagot, 23 years old, the dreamer who left Ark City promising great things, in the former Soviet Union, chasing an impossible dream, still not sure of just where she’s going in life. I majored in International Relations thinking I would work for the UN, promoting world peace, doing great things. Then I said to hell with the rest of the world, it’s all Russia Russia Russia, a country that used to be great but went to shit 20 years ago, and now it’s a weak little tadpole in the sea of global hierarchy. Put simply, I jumped onto the Russia bandwagon about 20 years too late. The Soviet Union’s dead and gone, and in its place is a struggling, nascent democracy. The end. How did I go from Buff Bagot the dreamer to Buff Bagot the Russia fiend? How is my love for Russia ever going to translate into greatness? How can I change the world if I was willing to throw it all out in favor of Russia? I have been indulging myself so much in my intellectual fantasies that I forgot my original goal: to create more good in the world. I guess the challenge is going to be finding some career that links Russia with the greater good. Or else tossing Russia out and starting again from scratch…

Monday, September 20, 2010

My Attempt at Positivity

To prove to everyone that I am capable of positivity, today’s blog post is a list of all the things I like about Russia.

1. 1. Russian history. There isn’t a part of Russian history that doesn’t fascinate me. It has a rich tsarist history rife with intrigue and drama. The history of its peasantry is very interesting as well. I attribute my fascination with the Russian peasantry to Professor Jack Kollmann, who I took a class with last year about rural religious practices in 19th-century peasant Russia. Speaking of which, Professor Kollmann and his wife Nancy are here in Moscow for a semester for the Stanford in Moscow program. Tomorrow I am going on an outing with them to a small town called Zvenigorod, which was founded in the 12th century and is home to some very old Orthodox churches. I’m really excited, and I promise to take lots of pictures. Anyway, don’t even get me started on Communist history, which is the granddaddy of all of my historical fascinations.

2. 2. Russian food (well, generally). Every one of my meals includes cabbage in some form, which greatly pleases me. Borscht, or beet soup, ranks as one of my top five favorite foods of all time. Pelmeni, or Russian dumplings, are sinfully delicious. Russian mushrooms are always fresh and flavorful. Blini, or Russian crepes, are also awesome. Russians also use fresh dill on most of their dishes, which adds an interesting taste that I am not accustomed to. Although Russian food is certainly not the best food I’ve ever tried, it has its highlights.

3. 3. The Moscow metro. It is one of the most beautiful and efficient in the world, and many of the metro stations were built during the Communist period, so there are lots of historical remnants everywhere I go.

4. 4. The architecture, at least from the tsarist period. You know those onion-domed churches? Those are pretty awesome. Stalin also commissioned some pretty cool buildings, like Moscow State University.

5. 5. Russian hospitality. If you go to visit a friend at her apartment, you will never go hungry or thirsty.

6. 6. Russian trains. Train as a means of transportation is very popular here. To get to St. Petersburg or other surrounding cities, it is common to take an overnight train. It is so much fun because there are little fold-out beds and also a table to sit around and chat with friends. It’s always fun to bring your own food and alcohol and have a little feast on the train. It is also common to meet other passengers on the train, strike up a conversation, and become friends. At the end of my stay in Moscow, I hope to take the Trans-Siberian railroad all the way to Vladivostok, in eastern Siberia. That will be the mother of all train rides.

7. 7. Russian honey. Honey here doesn’t just come in liquid form in a plastic bear, like in the US. Here you can buy light yellow honey, dark brown honey, honey in solid granular form, honey in a comb, and the list goes on. There is even a honey fair every year, where you can go taste test people’s homemade honey.

8. 8. Russian vodka.

9. 9. Vladimir Putin.

AllAll right, I know this is awful, but I just can’t think of anything else I like about Russia. It took me forever to come up with the list I already have. So just accept it for what it is. I tried extra hard to be positive and now I’m exhausted. I think maybe I’ll go back to bed now.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Me, Myself, and I

Back in February, when this whole coming to Russia scheme was in its embryonic stages, my motive seemed pretty clear to me: improve my Russian. This was, and still is, my weakest area in terms of my desirability as a candidate for a master’s program in Russian studies at competitive institutions like Harvard or Georgetown. The plan was pretty cut and dry: go to Moscow for a year, apply for graduate school from here, go to graduate school for two years, apply for a job at the State Department or a think tank or some government institute, then live happily ever after.

Having had lots of time to myself over the past three weeks, other, more subconscious motives have arisen. It even seems to me that, in terms of personal growth, these motives might hold more weight than the original motive. I mean, who knows, I might completely change my mind about my career path anyway.

I have an irrational fear of sounding or being cliché, but here goes: I think one of my primary motives in coming to Moscow was to figure myself out. Ugh, god, just reading over that sentence makes me cringe. How many Americans, and I guess people in general, go to other countries to “find themselves”? WTF does that even mean? And wasn’t Eat, Pray, Love a pretty big failure in literary circles and in theatres? Good god, I’m pretty embarrassed right now.

All right, getting over my initial self-disgust, I’m going to delve a little more into this subject of self-realization. I’m not actually sure if we all need or feel the need to “discover ourselves", whatever that means. One of the fundamental problems with being human is that I can’t possibly know what it’s like to be the next person, or the next; I only know what it’s like to be me. I don’t know if other people feel the same way I do, if we all are pretty much alike, or if we’re all truly unique in our emotions. I don’t know if other people feel as complicated, confused, self-disgusted, dependent, desperate, manic, depressed, or sometimes giddy as I do. I don’t know if it’s just me, if I’m alone in the world in feeling this way. I’ve been told that I’m not alone, that almost everyone feels like I do. Then why do I always feel so alone, like nobody gets it? I feel so incredibly self-aware, that it’s uncomfortable. I feel that, if I had stayed in Ark City, I would wither away into nothing out of depression and inertia. Entropy, I guess. In Ark City I have so many people acting as emotional crutches, holding me up and giving me a false sense of greatness, that I think I could life my entire life never actually knowing what lies beneath my everyday thought process. I can’t imagine that.

For one thing, as all of my readers will know and probably get sick of hearing (sorry, everyone!), I am depressed as hell most of the time. For this reason, I feel an invisible but undeniable pull toward the unknown. I believe that, the more I see of the world, the more I will see of myself, until I eventually reach the core of my depression and figure out just WTF is causing it. Once I find the root, maybe I can eradicate it. And if that’s not an option, then at least I can gain enough experience and spend enough time surviving on my own that I eventually learn to cope with that it in a more effective way than I already do. At this point in my life, I let the depression control me. I cater to it like it’s my effing child. When I’m feeling depressed, I like to stay home under the covers in bed. I like to eat comfort foods. I like to listen to Radiohead and feel oh so sorry for myself. That barrier between my depression and a good day just seems too exhausting to climb. So I just nurse the depression like it’s a poor little pathetic creature in need of love and care. Gah.

Okay, wow, I’m really going off on a tangent here. I sat down to write this blog post with the intention of compiling a list of the things I have learned about myself these past few weeks in Moscow. Because, really, all of this time alone has revealed, in stark detail, a lot about myself that either a) I didn’t ever notice or b) I prefer to not notice. So, here’s a by no means exhaustive list:

1. I am flaky. If I don’t want to talk to someone, I screen my phone calls. I often make up excuses to get out of doing social things. I often say I will do something, then I back out. Usually this happens when I am too grumpy to go out and find social situations exhausting. I hate that I am flaky, and I know other people hate it. I am very, very uncomfortable with this aspect of myself.

2. I don’t take very good care of myself, physically or mentally. I always forget to take my pills, I don’t eat healthily, and sometimes, if food is not readily available, I just don’t eat. I almost never take my contacts out; in fact, I have gone days and even weeks without taking them out. Don’t get me wrong; I am very clean and hygienic. I just don’t go above and beyond the call of duty to keep myself healthy or happy. I think maybe this lack of personal care stems from my low self-esteem.

3. I am not a picky eater. I will generally eat anything that is put in front of my face. I found a caterpillar in my soup the other day, and although of course I didn’t eat the caterpillar, I was back again the next day eating the same soup from the same cauldron. I will eat mystery meat. I will eat things I’ve never seen before that I can’t quite identify. I have no food preferences in Moscow. If it’s food, I’ll eat it.

4. I’m a lot more of an introvert than I thought I was. Like I said before, I often avoid social situations, mostly because I get tired trying to put on an act in front of people. Usually I am in a pissy mood (bah humbug, I know) and don’t feel like dealing with people.

5. I’m moody.

6. I am kinder than the average person (at least the average Russian). Whenever I see an old lady on the metro, I let her have my seat. I open doors for people. I let a stranger use my computer when he was freaking out about not having Internet. I always greet people. I know this is kind of a stupid thing to notice about myself, but I’m putting forth an extra effort to say at least one positive thing.

7. I curse… a lot.

8. I laugh really loudly.

9. I am often broody and silent in social situations, especially if it’s with people I just met. This is not so when I’m around my friends, usually.

10. I’m pretty funny. At least I like to think so.

11. I like animals way more than I should. So much so, that when I told my Russian professor that I have five cats, she accused me of being mentally ill.

12. I have very progressive values. I am a feminist (see previous blog post), very un-racist (after witnessing Russian racism, I know that there is a huge difference between minor prejudices and racism), liberal in my views on sex and marriage, etc.

13. I really suck at speaking Russian. I mean, really suck.

14. I am emotionally dependent on other people for my self-esteem. When I am alone, without anyone to hold me up, I feel like shit. This is one of my biggest problems, and I hope to make some progress during my time here.

15. I prefer solitude.

16. I like coffee.

That is a pretty effing long list. I could definitely think of more, and I’m sure I will have more self-realizations as time goes on. I think my time here will be well spent, as long as I continue to pay close attention to my behavior in all kinds of situations. It’s like I’m having a date night with myself, only it lasts a year. I sure do get sick of myself, though. Let me tell you. I have about had it with myself, and it’s only been three weeks. I bet you guys are getting sick of me, too. You're probably thinking, "does this girl ever have anything positive to say? She's like Eyeore, for godsakes." I'm sorry, man. I really am. I am hoping that, over time, this will improve. But I've got to continue being true to myself, or the blog will lose its authenticity. Please bear with me...

Monday, September 13, 2010

Clash of Cultures

Despite my severe head cold (I even lost my voice and could only talk in a squeak), yesterday I met up with Carolyn and Marlena, who just arrived in Moscow to get their master's degree in Change Management (don't even ask) at The Academy of the National Economy. Carolyn and Marlena are two of my friends from Stanford, who were both in my Russian class and graduated with me in June. I am so thrilled to have them here, since I like them both very much. I feel a lot less alone knowing we're all sharing similar experiences.

Contrary to my usual cravings, yesterday all I wanted in life was a mondo cheeseburger from McDonalds, probably because for the past couple of days I had only been eating oatmeal and chicken soup. I fantasized about cheeseburgers for approximately 36 hours before finally mustering up the energy to leave the dorm and go in search of one (Russia reverts us all back to the state of nature: hunting and gathering). Coincidentally, Marlena and Carolyn were already at McDonalds, so I met them there and indulged in a big ol' cheeseburger, fries, and a salad. Oh man was it good.

After that, we went over to a friend of Marlena's apartment. Marlena's friend is a girl named Tatev from Armenia, who moved to Moscow about six years ago. (A side note about Armenia in case you're not familiar with it: it's a small country next to Turkey). When we arrived at her apartment, she and her mom prepared a veritable Armenian feast for us: lots of dried fruit and nuts, Armenian coffee that Tatev spent about 20 minutes hand-grinding, bread, and some of the most delicious beef jerky I have ever tasted. DAMN was that beef jerky good. It's a shame customs doesn't allow me to bring meat from one country to another, because I would definitely stock up on that shit and bring some home for my friends to try. Anyway, Tatev and her family were incredibly hospitable. Hospitality is very, very important in Russia and the surrounding countries. You never visit another person's apartment without them serving you some sort of food and drink. That's one thing I wish we valued in America. Although Russia certainly has its issues, part of its appeal is the hospitality of its people. They are so incredibly generous, and even if they have very little, they will give it all away to you.

I was very impressed with Tatev and her family, and I am so glad I went along to Tatev's apartment. We sat and talked with Tatev and her cousin for hours about all kinds of really interesting subjects, from relationships, to marriage, to sex, to movies, to racism, to feminism. I was both shocked and fascinated by the vast cultural differences between Armenians and Americans. It made me stop and think about my own values and beliefs, which in all my 23 years I have never really thought twice about. I was always under the impression that my values, which I share with so many other Americans, were just natural. I guess I was wrong.

Take marriage, for instance. This is a subject I have come across again and again these last couple of weeks in Moscow. It is a very important issue here in Russia, and both Russian men and women (especially women) take it very seriously. In America -- and here I am generally referring to the America that Stanford represents (which I realize is a specific demographic), since my current beliefs and values were formed there -- there seems to be a general consensus that marriage is not to be rushed. I, for one, believe that a woman should develop a solid, independent foundation for herself before she marries. For me, a good marriage age would be about 28 (although I am certainly flexible), after I have finished graduate school. I have no intention of ever depending on a man, financially or emotionally. I would never marry just to marry; I have my heart set on finding the perfect fit for me, in terms of education level, interests, life goals, etc. Although love certainly matters to me, I am looking for a life partner that I mesh well with on a practical level. And that means that we have to agree on things like splitting household duties, earning income, and raising children. I do not plan on being the sole chef and maid of the house. I do not plan on serving my husband. I realize that many people will fundamentally disagree with me here, but I reject the notion of the 1950s housewife. I'm sure there are varying beliefs and values within America, but this is my personal belief, and I know Carolyn and Marlena will agree that this is generally how a university-educated American female thinks.

In Russia and also in Armenia, the complete opposite values prevail. According to Tatev, my friend Nastya, and many other Russians I have spoken with over the past couple of weeks, marriage is the single most important part of a woman's life. People here marry relatively young; the average age to marry is around 21 or 22. If a person is not married by 25, he/she is viewed as strange, and it is generally thought that something must be wrong with him/her. It is very rare to come across an unmarried 25-year-old. It is also thought that the first child should be born at age 25, at the latest. To marry at age 30 is pretty much considered an abomination. Also, at least in Armenia, a woman is expected to wait until marriage to have sex; non-virgins are considered whores and not marriageable. Women are also expected to fulfill traditional feminine roles: housewife, cook, mother, maid. A highly educated woman is unappealing and generally undesirable to a Russian or Armenian man. When I told my Russian professor that I hoped to marry only after graduate school, she told me that the longer I waited, the less choices I would have, and that too much education would make me less appealing to my candidates for future husband. After all, "no man wants a wife who is smarter than him".

I am well aware that the aforementioned values are traditional and have prevailed for most of history. I realize that my extremely progressive values are not the norm and are actually pretty strange in light of tradition. However, I did not come to fully appreciate this until yesterday, when Tatev and her cousin stared at Carolyn, Marlena, and me as if we were freaks of nature. When we said we did not want to serve our husbands, Tatev asked us, "If you do not serve your husband and expect him to clean his own dishes and cook his own food, what then is the difference between a man and a woman?" I responded, "We like to think there isn't any difference."

I know there are many anti-feminists out there who resent the feminist movement and all it entails. There are many strong believers in gender differentiation out there. What people like Carolyn, Marlena, and I stand for is not natural or even wholly accepted by society. We may not even be "right", and I'm not even sure there is a "right". But anyway, some may consider it to be "against nature" to pursue what are traditionally men's activities, but if that is the case, then I need someone to explain to me what is so wrong with going against nature.

There is this quote that I really like. I'm not sure who said it. But it goes like this: "We are the daughters of feminists who said 'You can be anything,' and we heard 'You have to be everything.'"

Anyway, the marriage conversation with Tatev and her cousin was pretty fascinating, and it was only one of many conversations I've had on the subject. In fact, after so much ado over marriage in Russia, I am starting to feel a little bit of pressure. Good thing that when I go back to America it'll be socially acceptable that I'm not married...




Saturday, September 11, 2010

Between a Rock and a Hard Place... Sort Of

Ladies and gentlemen, it's that time again to show my ass to the world by demonstrating that it doesn't matter how book smart I am or how prestigious my alma mater is; none of these things provide immunity from being a dumbass and getting myself into ridiculous situations.

Last night started out normally. I went to dinner for a friend's birthday at a hopping yet expensive Russian restaurant called Cafe Mayak, where the $8 bowl of minestrone soup I ordered was really nothing but "water with things in it" (i.e. a thin broth with mixed vegetables floating around in it)--at least that's how the fascist, white supremacist German sitting to my left referred to it. I had a beer and a couple of glasses of wine, which when taken in combination with my head cold made me feel sort of floaty and surreal. After dinner our interesting group of Europeans, Russians, Vietnamese, and Americans made our way to a bar called Gogol, where I ate some unidentifiable yet delicious Russian dessert and saw the largest cockroach in the Northern Hemisphere crawling across the floor. Said cockroach (what I prefer to refer to as an evolutionary abomination in serious need of annihilation) and the caterpillar I found earlier that day in my cabbage soup really made for a critter-filled day.

After some interesting conversation at Gogol I finally decided to call it a night, since I was quickly losing my voice from my cold. My room mate and a Russian friend helped me find a taxi (well, not really a taxi, but an unmarked car claiming to be a taxi) back to the university. I must say that the taxi ride back to MGU was pretty amazing. I'm not very accustomed to living in a big city, and living in such an old and history-rich city as Moscow is quite a transition from Ark City or Stanford life. It was around 4:00 in the morning and the streets were practically empty, but all the amazing land marks were all lit up and looking majestic: the Kremlin, St. Basil's Cathedral, the Cathedral of Christ the Redeemer, the giant old buildings commissioned by Stalin, MGU. As we drove by all of these amazing architectural wonders all lit up in the silent night, I was pretty excited. But anyway, enough of that corny shit.

Once I got back to MGU, the real fun started. Keep in mind that it was around 4:00 in the morning, and technically the university shuts down around midnight. But there are still security guards there to check your documents and let you in, so I figured I wouldn't have any problems. What a silly assumption to make. When I took the elevator up to the fourth floor (that's where my room is), I ran into some real problems. Every night the "dorm mother", whose sole purpose seems to be to nag us since our parents aren't here to do so, closes these iron gates right at the entrance to the elevator, so that anyone trying to leave the elevator can't get out. Well, as I attempted to exit the elevator, there was the iron gate, right smack in my face and padlocked shut. Before I could turn back around and take the elevator back down to the first floor, the elevator doors closed, and I was stuck between the closed elevator and the gate. There was literally a half foot of space between the elevator doors and the gate. I was stuck like a rat in a tiny cage. At first I tried to remain calm and tested my key to see if it would unlock the padlock. That didn't work. Then I stood there for a second doing absolutely nothing. Then I started pathetically calling "Hello? Hello?" in my awful Russian, hoping that the dorm mother sleeping in the other room would hear me and have mercy. Then I started shaking the iron gate, hoping that would get her attention. When nothing happened, I tried to call my room mate, only to discover that I had no credit on my phone. Then I started panicking. Holy shit, I was going to be stuck between the elevator and the little f@#$ing gate for the entire night. I couldn't even reach the elevator button to open the elevator back up. So I resigned myself to squeezing myself into a sitting position in my little rat cage, feeling like an idiot, all dressed up in clubbing clothes and heels, a 23-year-old adult stuck in the limbo of elevator-gate exile.

Finally, the dorm mother emerged from her hibernation, grumbling at me in Russian. From her diatribe I caught "do you see what time it is?" and "how long have you been stuck here?" and "the dorm closes at midnight, you should know that" and "you should have taken the stairs" and "my God". Who knows what else she said, since I have the Russian level of a five-year-old. All I know is, I felt like a blooming idiot. She pushed the elevator button for me, I took the elevator back down to the first floor, and I took the stairs to my room.

God I'm an idiot.


Friday, September 10, 2010

Buff Plays Dress-Up in Moscow

It’s amazing what a pair of heels can do.

The day before yesterday I finally mustered up the courage and physical endurance to wear a pair of high-heeled shoes. Back in the States wearing heels is usually not a problem for me, as I don’t do a lot of walking anyway. But in Russia, I walk several miles a day, usually between the metro and my dorm. And a couple of miles in high heels are pretty damn torturous.

Russian women are generally more traditional than American women, in that they still subscribe to traditional gender roles and stereotypes (i.e. wearing pantyhose everyday; wearing high heels everywhere; expecting men to always foot the bill and pour the drinks; working “feminine” jobs like secretary, nurse, etc.; knowing how to cook and clean; etc.). From a young age, Russian girls are taught to wear high heels every single day and to dress elegantly. They grow accustomed to it over the years, and once they’re adults the discomfort of wearing high heels is either so ingrained that they’ve forgotten about it, or it simply doesn’t cross their minds at all. Although of course I see plenty of Russian girls who dress like American girls (flat shoes, T-shirts, etc.), I see many more distinctly Russian-looking girls; that is, girls who are dressed impeccably, as if they are going out to a night club on a Monday morning. Girls who walk miles and miles in 5-inch stilettos and don’t struggle in the least. And what’s more, these girls know how to walk in high heels. They don’t stumble or walk all stiff-legged like we Americans who only wear heels for interviews. These girls have a swagger like they’re on the catwalk. And many of them look like models. This, to me, is amazing and extremely intimidating. But that’s Russia, and it is what it is.

So anyway, the point of the story is that I wanted to look like a Russian girl the other day, so I put in the extra effort to sport some high heels. Within literally 20 steps, to say I was hurting is an understatement. When walking in heels, one has not only to consider how painful it is; one has to consider that there is an art to walking in high heels. We have to be sure to stand up extra straight to make up for our instinctual desire to slouch from the discomfort. We have to concentrate on walking heel to toe, heel to toe. We have to constantly make sure we are not stomping like a Clydesdale. Walking in heels is f@#$ing difficult. It requires a grace that we are not born with, but that we must acquire through practice. And it’s hard to know if we are even walking correctly if we don’t have a mirror to inspect ourselves in. I get really paranoid when I walk in heels, because I don’t want people to look at me and be like “Goddamn that girl can’t walk in heels”. So at every opportunity I get to check my reflection in a glass window as I’m walking down the street, I make sure I’ve got the right posture. And the other day when I was walking through Moscow in high heels, I paid extra attention to the way I walked.

So that’s why, when I noticed people staring at me, I was confused. I got all paranoid and started thinking that maybe I was walking like an ape. So I kept checking out my reflection to make sure I didn’t look like an idiot. Sure enough, I was walking just fine. But people kept staring. I still don’t know why they were staring. I like to think it’s because I looked damn fine that day, but I am reluctant to give myself that much credit. I finally settled on the reasoning that when girls wear heels, they are more noticeable, so people instinctually check them out. I, for one, always check girls out who are wearing awesome heels. It’s not because I think they look ridiculous, but more out of curiosity and admiration. Whatev. I just hope it wasn’t because I looked like a stupid American trying too hard to look Russian.

And damn, was I glad to take those little shits off at the end of the day and put on my slippers.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Russia Has Sucked My Soul Dry

There is a reason I haven't been blogging regularly since I arrived in Moscow. Ever since I stepped off that plane, I have been struggling with monumental depression. Some days are better than others, but generally they are never much better than mediocre. I spend a lot of time with myself, be it alone in my room or as an anonymous passenger on the subway. I have experienced a number of blog-worthy things in the last ten days. It's not that I have no material. It's simply that, at the end of the day, when I settle down in my room for the night, I have nothing to say. I feel like a heavy wet blanket is smothering my mind and rendering me silent. I don't have the energy or the desire to write. Every morning when I wake up, I tell myself that today I will blog. But by afternoon my mind is so worn down by loneliness/social alienation/depression that I just don't have anything to say.

Generally, I am a pretty depressed person. I'm very sensitive to external stimuli and quick to pick up on subtleties. I am easily brought down. My whole life has been this way, and I have spent most of it using up tons of energy to push those things away or to be able to function in spite of them. Functioning in spite of depressors requires an immense amount of mental energy, and most days I end up defeated by those depressors. I very rarely triumph over them, and when I do, I am so incredibly aware of how transitory my bouts of happiness are that I end up not being able to fully enjoy them. I just keep hoping that, as long as I live my life like a normal person, go through the motions, and even attempt to over-achieve, happiness will eventually follow. My reputation as an over-achiever stems from a desperate desire to overcome what I consider to be an exhausting, difficult, sometimes not even worthwhile, life.

Okay so, all of that was really depressing to read, I'm sure. But let's be honest with ourselves here. I'm not blogging exclusively for your entertainment. This year in Russia is an experiment in self discovery, and writing is just another instrument in my toolbox to help me along the way. The fact that I am broadcasting my thoughts to the entirety of the web community and facebook is questionable, I know. Sometimes it bothers me. A lot of the stuff I say is awful, lewd, or just downright depressing. Sometimes I worry that anything I say could come back to bite me in the ass when it comes time to begin my "career" (whatever and whenever that may be). Sometimes I worry that I will end up alienating people. But there is a small, pathetic little hope in the back of my mind that the people reading this will connect with bits and pieces of what I'm saying, or that they will gain some greater insight into the real Buff that assists them in deciding whether or not I'm a worthy friend/person. This hope trumps my fears of rejection and self-incrimination. Maybe (almost certainly) in the future I will regret broadcasting my bare soul to all. It's pretty inevitable. I can't look back on my past without cringing; it's instinctual and automatic. But all I have to say is: whatev.

Let's get back to current events. I have been in Moscow for ten days, and all told I have pretty much completely adjusted (depression notwithstanding). It didn't take me long, actually. As my readers will know, those first couple of days were pure hell, but soon after that I fully recovered. Now I am back to the regular old depressed Buff with a comedic edge, only I don't really have many people to tell jokes to, since my Russian is at the level of a five-year-old. I have made a few new friends, which I am quite happy about. I have spent a little time with my old friend Nastya and her boyfriend Rene, although not as much time as I would like. I have also befriended a French student here at MGU named Jawad, who I probably spend the most time with, mostly because we both live in campus. His English is quite fluent, so we are able to freely communicate. We quickly became friends because of our similar feelings of alienation and loneliness after moving to Moscow. It seems that I am doing a poor job of making Russian friends and an excellent job of making English-speaking friends. It's funny how all the English-speakers find each other so quickly. For my own well-being, I should really make more of an effort to befriend more people (especially Russians). But I've found that after a long day of Russian lessons and traveling around the city, I don't want to do anything but be alone in my room. Why am I so lame?

I actually think I am going to go work on some Russian homework right now, and then come back and write another installment of my blog. Writing this post has sapped me of my energy and I need another $6.50 cappuccino anyway...