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20 Oct 2014

To Fall

...& other protagonists of a wonderful Sunday outside of New York


Dear Stranger,
The heat of the city finally gives into the embrace of Fall. Sunday arrives with a blissful blue sky and strips 10 degrees off the precious New York weekend. At the same time 4 girls in the need of escape and some Nature, embark on a road trip and head Upstate in the early hours of the day.
We meet in a coffee shop on 86th and Broadway, which seems like the only place with a heartbeat at 9 am on a Sunday. I’m waking my brain gradually by pouring cinnamon tea into my body. My 3 trip companions gather from various corners, arriving one by one all the way from Brooklyn, Financial District and New Jersey, all 3 of them bundled to the bone, prepared for some outdoor action away from the concrete hug of the city. We fill the blue vehicle (of course, as a cliche woman, that’s the only characteristic of the car that I can recollect) squishing bodies, jackets, bags and unnecessary amount of reading materials into its interiors. I’m amused by our roadtrip accessories. Mine include also a kilo of apples and a change of yoga clothes, cause why not? Like every yoga junkie, I’ve programmed myself to look for any opportunity to shoot a leg up the sky.
4 girls, 4 countries
The car zooms through George Washington bridge, crossing Hudson’s murky face like a lightning. Just 10 minutes into our trip, Fall unfolds its colourful grace. Trees have engaged into a dazzling stritease - losing attire in a vibrant dance. I’m following their frames, hissing pass our car, till I lose them from my sight. My head is swiping from left to right, like a dog following a tennis ball. I’m realizing I’ve been staring at a whole lot of buildings in the last few months. This tree show is relaxing for both my eyes and my brain.
The girls are chatting cheerfully. The 4 of us represent four different countries of the former Eastern Block. A Romanian, a Bulgarian, a Moldovan and a Russian somehow have ended up across the ocean, into one tiny car together, thousands of miles away from their birth spot. I like how different and how alike we are. We don’t speak the same language or have the profession, nor do we have the same interests. Yet, we speak of similar past and somehow their childhood memories seem to be mine as well. This inexplicable closeness makes me feel so at ease, and so far away from anything familiar, it gives me a sense of home.
The Storm King Art Center
Our trip has a destination. We high five the Storm King Art Center sign in recognition of our arrival. A long string of cars checks in with the ticket booth, which looks like a dwarf house in a middle of vast open field. The first sculptures are in sight. They look like giants, lying carelessly amidst a valley of grass and wheat. In the Art Center’s own words, it is:
“Widely celebrated as one of the world’s leading sculpture parks, Storm King Art Center has welcomed visitors from across the globe for fifty years. It is located only one hour north of New York City, in the lower Hudson Valley, where its pristine 500-acre landscape of fields, hills, and woodlands provides the setting for a collection of more than 100 carefully sited sculptures created by some of the most acclaimed artists of our time.”
...and indeed it is. 
Dancer pose with the Pyramidian 

We wander around the specimen scattered at comfortable distance from each other. Each one of them occupies a space at least 3 times the size of my apartment. We are gazing profoundly at their ambiguous names, exclaiming at the age proof (some are dated back to 1969). They astonish us with their ahead-of-time ideas, as well as with the length of their creation period. The “Pyramidian” says it took about 10 years to emerge.

 "Created from four steel beams, Pyramidium points to earth and sky, west and east, north and south—the six Chinese directions. Its geometric lines and moving center form a Zen koan: more transparent than the ancient pyramids yet just as secretive."

I dig the sculpture and take my “Dancer Pose” in front of it, coming back to those unlimited yoga opportunities.






We move onto a forest, which is sheltering the exhibition of an artist called Zhang Huan. That’s my zen moment of today. Buddhist statues and symbols are dispersed around, all in pieces. The walk through them is highly meditative, not because of the spiritually inspired art, simply because it’s freaking awesome to walk through a park, in the first cold yet sunny day of Fall and stare at giant statues. 
Three legged Buddha, Zhang Huan

“Three legged Buddha” has gathered a fan club, which is selfie-ing it away. The decomposition, which the artist has achieved is striking, underlined by the size of the achievement. Buddha has stepped on his head. The interpretation of this act is left to the spectators.
I’m the self-proclaimed tour guide of our group and I’ve taken ownership of the map. The girls are stamping through the uneven grounds, while I’m chasing the paper every time the wind decide to snatch it off my hands. He’s been our frenemy today. He has definitely managed to clear our head of any unnecessary thoughts, but the unexpected intensity is sweeping right through the clothing and into the bones.
View of The Storm King Art Center

After 2 hours of chills & thrills we decide to call it a day, congratulating ourselves for the efforts to feast on some art as we head off to Cornwall-on-the-Hudson to feed the flesh as well. We follow the recommendations of locals and end up in a quaint restaurant that hasn’t forgone the gluten-free mania, nor the choice of eggs preparation styles. There’s hardly anything else that can add to this wonderful day out of the Metropolitan zoo. We are 4 happy wild hens returning back to the premises of our luxurious coop.
As we part, I roll out of the car followed by a collection of leaves that I’ve stashed into my bag. They carry the scent of a wet cow, but I don’t mind it. I want a recollection of today to follow me home so I can share the sweet Fall melancholy with a glass of whiskey and a jazz song.
To Fall

Please note: All articles and photographs contained here are property of © Gypsy Letters, 2014 unless otherwise noted. No part of this website may be reproduced without the explicit permission of the copyright holder.

13 Oct 2014

Why I travel?

Hello Stranger,
I disappeared for a while. 


Travel anticipation
Summer has been good in keeping me away from the computer. The pages of my journal filled. When I go back to them now, they look like reshuffled thoughts of a clown. I will probably spend all winter sorting them out, going through the travels and savoring the taste of the different places. 

I’ve been asked many times why I travel so much. I’ve always taken the question with a moment of retrospect. Do I really travel so much? I guess, I move around often. I often revisit places of significance. I’m often a guest in cities that have been my home. But I’ve never crossed the Amazon or dined with the ancient dwellers of Australia. I haven’t flown across the Grand Canyon, nor have I chased antelopes in South Africa. Maybe all these adventurous images work as levers in my being, pushing the urge that make my Nature unsettling.
Mermaid Parade, Coney Island
For now the exploration takes me mostly to the jungle within cities, where the only animals running in the open wear shiny collars and barcode tattoos. An adventure is considered crossing a street on a red traffic light, smiling at a handsome stranger walking in the opposite direction, finding myself in the wrong quarter or trying that thing from the food cart, which looks like a fried bug.
Observing strangers in their habitat is another thing that travel gives me. Being anonymous releases me from common duties, which can turn even the most beautiful surrounding in an annoying impediment between me and the completion of an errand. When I travel there is no schedule, no particular place I need to be. I am free like a ghost sliding in the crowds. And this ghost likes to plunge into the madness of street festivals and flashmobs, mess with street musicians and chalk artists. It likes to see couples in love, dog owners acting as parents, the ability of pedestrians to walk and text at the same time, the noise of exclamations in different languages.
Street Band & a Dog, New Orleans

And there’s nothing better than striking random conversations with elderly philosophers, animal rights activists or cupcake sellers. A sunny table of a shabby cafe in any city can offer romance and even the sudden rain is no longer an annoyance.
When I travel I still find the patience to read the signs of shops or hit the big questions of humanity. Why do we compare ourselves? Why do we seek and want the things we don’t have? Why do we become blind to what we have? And I am still both fascinated and scared of the impact we have on our planet and how irresponsible anything we do is, as long as it is justified with making money. 

I travel for all these unreasonable questions.



Please note: All articles and photographs contained here are property of © Gypsy Letters, 2014 unless otherwise noted. No part of this website may be reproduced without the explicit permission of the copyright holder.

5 Mar 2014

The Travel to Becoming a Yoga Teacher

Hello Stranger,

I'm running up 6th avenue, my backpack bouncing up and down my back, as if wishing to break free. After a busy office day, I'm both happy and thrilled to sit through my first yoga class observation. It's close to 7 p.m. and I'm searching on the display of my phone further instructions on how to find the studio of 38th street. New York, despite its neatly ordered streets, still confuses me. The order by itself hides so much creative chaos, it sends out my head spinning in all directions.

I'm running down in direction of 7th Avenue - no sign of a Nail Shop. The YTTP website promises an entrance behind an acrylic workshop to transform into the world of Yoga to the People, like a speakeasy from the 1920s. I surrender after 5 min of searching, asking a woman for directions. Luckily she knows where to point me to and I enter up the narrow stairway, panting and pushing through students who are waiting calmly in a line to enter for class.

View of 6th Avenue at Night
In a matter of seconds I free myself from the pile of winter clothes and park my overheated body onto a stack of neatly folded mats. I'm trying to stay out of the way of students, but also be available to help James, tonight's teacher, register and get the students organized for class. Matt, towel, water - multiple times. I take on my duty with a smile, feeling like the task is more rewarding than the 10 hours I've spent sitting at a desk today. Now that desk is a million of miles away and the class is about to begin. The presence of so many faces - tranquil and smiling puts me into a complete state of zen.

"Child's pose, please". All bodies sink into the floor of colorful patches created by the variety of mats. "Let's take our first collective breath". The breath of the entire room comes and goes through me. I inhale the hot air, feeling my heart working like a madman, I exhale - welcoming the first drops of sweat rush down my spine. In the dim light of the room and the oozing sound of the heating machine, the gentle flow of yoga poses transforms the bodies into tender dancers, searching for the farthest corners of their abilities. Some move in complete harmony and easiness, others struggle to unite their willful spirit under the protests of their bodies. In the haze of the struggle and the dance, I can only feel my own body possessed completely by the beauty of the moment.

Yoga to The People, St. Mark's Place
My mind begins to wonder. Being an observer of this class is such an unique opportunity. I experience every constrain, exploration and achievement of the students through the blinking routine of my eyes, seeing so clear the physical and the mental part of us join and depart, and then join and depart again. It's like a passionate relationship, a doomed love, a fight among lovers to find the same language. Under the soft guidance of the teacher's voice everyone has undertaken their own private journey for transformation and the energy fills the room, making the air heavy, sticky, liberating...

My head gets stuck onto the sentence "Every pose is an invitation...". Deep inside of me it opens room for compassion and love that reminds me of my childhood - when I wasn't afraid to be vulnerable. I've lost this ability, somewhere along the road of growing up, putting all emotions under a shield, under a magnificent mental barricade. They are all now banging on that door, asking to be part of this body again. It's like the yoga poses, the energy of this room have created a tunnel leading straight to this sacred forgotten place within me. And I'm thankful to all these people that are sharing their personal battle, their own twisting dance performance, their own sacred path with me. It's moving, powerful, unforgettable...

Please note: All articles and photographs contained here are property of © Gypsy Letters, 2014 unless otherwise noted. No part of this website may be reproduced without the explicit permission of the copyright holder.