Category: From Peter

  • how to banya

    Sanduny2

    It wasn't cold nor warm out, but grey and cloudy with overcast. Our small group met to go to the Sandunovskih, the oldest and most famous bath house in Moscow. Chaliapin once said, "It is the only real banya in Moscow." 

    We walked to the Baricadnaya metro and cautiously step onto the speed escalator which moves fast down a steep angle. The people coming up the other side all look like they are leaning backwards at a 45 degree angle. We board the train and it takes off, feeling as if we are traveling 100 miles an hour. Everything about the metro seems fast. We exit at Kuznitski most and check our bearings. Everything looks different when you come up out of the metro to an unfamiliar stop.

    The banya is well maintained. The building is old but the interior looks like it was remodeled in the late 70's, maintaining the ornate 19th century details. The men are separated from the women and we are offered three tiers of banya; the public banya on the main floor, the deluxe on the second floor (more prestigious), and the superior one on the third floor with a big swimming pool under skylights (for the elite communist party members in its hay day). The girls venture off in their direction and we select the mid-tier banya on the second floor. 

    We enter a lobby with booths. We select one and are asked if we need hats, slippers, or towels. I answer "yes" to all but we only get the towels and slippers. Men are lounging wrapped in towels, drinking beer and coming out of the baths through swinging doors. We go inside and shower off. Then there are choices of a small warm water pool, a very cold pool, and a cool bucket with a cord to pull and drench yourself with. I pulled the cord and the bucket delivered a cold hypothermic shock to my head and body.  My companions followed suit. Too breathless to talk, we entered the sauna. A naked man with a felt hat and gloves was throwing ladles of water into a brick stove. Other men were sitting on wood benches at various heights. It seemed incredibly hot and difficult to breathe.

    We didn't last long the first time. I could see how drunk Russians could die in there. It was like hell but voluntary. The stoker got up on a bench and started swirling the heat which instantly came down to our lower level. One of my companions had the smarts to walk out and we followed. Quickly getting oxygenated, we hopped into the cold pool, a very good way to drown. But once we got out, it was surprisingly refreshing. The whole body tingles. We then found our way into the warm bath.

    Back in the lounge, we ordered a draft Siberian Corona. Some men around us dozed. Others ordered food and beer. Others talked or watched a sporting event on a big screen TV. Relaxed, we went back in and cycled through the cold bucket, steam sauna, cold and finally warm pool. The hot sauna seemed more tolerable the second time round. I think it was actually cooling down because the third time in, the stoker started increasing the heat again. Some men took wet birch branches that were soaking in buckets by the pools and began flogging themselves. One was shouting incomprehensible words that sounded like yelps. We flogged each other which actually felt kind of good. Feeling the temperature rising again, we finished our third round in the sauna and headed back to the lounge to finish our cold refreshing beer. 

    Leaving the banya, overall we felt relaxed and agreed that it was a worthwhile experience. I doubt I'll join the elite club on the top floor. But one of those freezing cold winter days in January maybe the ideal time to come back and warm up, or cool down.
  • what happens in Budapest

    800px-E_Rozsda_-_Enfant_martyr_au_paradis_(1958) On Tuesday, I was walking towards the metro on my way to work when I noticed some very cool posters every 20 feet representing an art exhibit by an artist named Endre Rozsda (1913 – 1999). As I was taking a few snap shots of the posters, a guy came up to me and started speaking Hungarian. I apologized for not speaking the language and in pretty good English, he pointed across the street at a building and told me the opening exhibit was that night at 7PM and invited me to come. Having nothing else planned, I went to the opening and was quite impressed. His work is mostly post-impressionistic and surreal. The wine was quite good too. I spoke to an elderly couple who's English was pretty good and they told me they knew the artist.

    Then yesterday, I was headed back to my apartment which overlooks the Danube and the city. The hill is quite steep and it was hot going up. I stopped inside a small neighborhood grocery store, thinking I'd buy some wine for when I got back. I mostly drink red but it was hot and I was contemplating a white or rose. The guy working behind the cash register was a young guy around 40 years of age. He asked if he could help me.

    "I'm interested in trying a Hungarian rosé."

    "Are you drinking alone or with a woman?" he asked matter of factly.

    "Today, alone," I replied.

    "Because if you were drinking with a woman, I would suggest this sweeter rosé. But since you are unfortunately alone, I think perhaps the dry one is better."

    So I drank it alone watching Dancing with the Stars. Pretty pathetic I know but the wine was good!

  • sunny and warm in Budapest

    I'm back on a 2 week "tour of duty" (TDY) in Budapest. It is so nice here right now.

    I had an interesting patient who was a rower on the Hungarian olympic team in the 1940's. He shared with me some of his stories and how they got silver in the nationals but lost to the German's because of a leg cramp to one of his fellow rowers. So he decided not to come back to Hungary for fear that the Hungarians would be outraged that they lost to the Germans. He spent a great part of his life in Australia and became an architect. He and his wife returned to Hungary after his retirement. He got bored and took a job with our Embassy.

    I just got back from my lunch break and I feel like I'm coming out of hibernation. There are lots of Hungarians out and the restaurants and cafes are alive and full of people. I can't wait for Dina and the kids to come join me.

  • off to school

    Getting the kids going in the morning can be challenging. Camille, who usually sleeps until the crack of noon on weekends, gets herself up early to shower and dry her beautiful long hair. But she's not typically a morning person so getting her up early to go anywhere else but school is difficult. Stefan on the other hand, springs out of bed and immediately starts talking. "Okay! I'm ready for coffee! Can you help me with my boots?!" He's always got an exclamation mark and speaks in a loud voice. I'm the kind of guy who requires a few minutes of solitude to drink my strong cup of coffee (allowing it to work medicinally) and read the front page of the paper before engaging in dialogue. 

    In our discord, we manage. I make our coffee and breakfast. He's a picky eater so it has to be just so (his way) or he looks pathetically at you and asks for something else. Camille only requires coffee. She'll make herself toast and eat a yogurt or cereal. While cooking oatmeal or frying an egg (not too dry or runny), I try and get him to go get dressed. He gets side-tracked with his cars which irks me. 

    Last night it snowed and continued to fall all morning. I was making them coffee and asked Stefan to go get dressed. At the table, he recited his french poem and picked at his breakfast. I went to make his lunch for school and told him to go get his boots on. We didn't turn the hall light on and it was kind of dark. He got his coat on and pulled his book bag over his shoulder. As he walked out the door into the well lit hallway I realized, he had put his shorts on! 

    Just another morning at the Chordas'!
  • trip to ashaun

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    Yesterday I went with my friend to AWAH (pronounced "Ashaun). It's the Russian equivalent of a Walmart/Cosco store. The space is located inside a huge mall which you have to walk through to get into it. Boutiques, shoe, fur, jewelry stores, dry cleaners, and restaurants. Finally we got into AWAH with our super-sized shopping carts. The large isles are a square figure 8 with about 30 long smaller isles running through each box. The Russians are aggressive with their shopping carts and no one will hesitate to let you cut across. It felt like a roller derby.

    Yards of seeds to plant a garden, jars of marinated mushrooms, and hundreds of salami's and sausages. In addition to the usual electronics and cuts of meat was a 100 foot isle of smoked fish of every kind you could possibly imagine. Some whole with there heads on: trout, salmon, pike, mackerel, and eels. At the end of the isle was the herring and caviar section. Next time I'll have to take a picture.
  • lounge weekend

    After an active week at work and Stefan being off, we went to a very nice relaxed dinner party at our friends house. Great fajitas! And dessert! The walk home literally took less than 5 minutes.

    Yesterday we had plans to go out to Red Square but one of our friends got sick and we ended up lounging around most of the day. I listened to classical music in the morning, folk rock in the afternoon, and R&B and rock in the evening. The kids played Wii and socialized out with friends on the embassy compound. I did manage to complete a continuing education course on line on diabetes (required to keep my license updated) and got to the gym with Dina for a work out. So basically a lazy weekend for us.

    We are finally getting two people on board this coming week that we hired. So hopefully the work load will ease up for the nurse and administrative assistant. It took half a year to hire them and we're still down a nurse. We've managed good patient care but the ordering of supplies and routine administrative issues have fallen to the way side. Now we can get back up to speed.

    I travel to Yekaterinburg in the Ural's in a few weeks.
  • russian encounters

    Da Darlink! Many Russians speak pretty good English. As with any foreign language, they sometimes make innocent but comical errors (as we do when we speak Russian). And some expressions are quotable. Just like when Stefan was playing a charades game (Catch Phrase – not for 7 year olds) and said he couldn't act out "sex apple" (sex appeal) because he didn't even know what it means! Here are a few gems along with; "You are pushing my leg!"

    – "small by small" (little by little).
    – "please to help!"
    – "The glass ceiling falls on house of cards."
    – "He's always shooting from the hips!"
    – "Go down next isle and follow smells."
    – "My Betty-button hurts" (belly-button).
    – "Of course I know about confidentiality. When you verk for big oil: You talk. YOU DIE!"

    And my latest favorite: "Because bureaucracy demands it!"
  • we fall behind

    Sometimes we fall into a writers block. I fear the blog might sound repetitive and perhaps a bit boring. But our readers remind us that they are waiting. Thank you Clay!

    Our embassy life is a bit like living on a reservation. All amenities are supplied to us and most socializing happens in our teepees with occasional powwows and tribal stomps. So it takes some effort to get out and experience this city. We fall into routines; our kids go to school, we go to work, and dinner still needs to be made at the end of the day.

    But we do get out some and hopefully more so once the weather warms up, the days get longer, and we get our license to drive. In the mean time, there is plenty to see by metro and walking. 

    Yesterday evening we were invited to our friend Moscow Mom's for dinner.  The trolly driver was unusually nice. She got out of her booth to show us how to use the ticket to get through the turn stye, told Stefan to duck under for free, and asked us which stop we needed so she could signal us to get off. The windows were splattered with grit but we still made out some beautiful buildings and wooded parks. 

    Their apartment is small nice with views of the river and forest, beautiful! Our children played games together while we enjoyed each others company. We enjoyed handmade pasta and a vegetable tartine (eggplant, red and yellow bell peppers, and glazed carmelized onions), and for dessert, a chocolate tart and a lemon tart. Fantastic! Fun.

    The taxi ride home took a different route and we asked what was that beautiful fortress all lit up that we passed. The driver said it was a monastery. Beautiful!  All walking distance from our house and we didn't even know it.

    It's good to get out.
  • love finland

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    I had a great time in Finland! The people were very warm and friendly. They all speak English. When I asked the obvious question of why that is so, they said that if they only spoke Finish, they would isolate themselves from the rest of the world since no one else speaks the language. They learn English and another language in primary and secondary school. 

    Nokia rules. It's not uncommon to be in a store looking at a clothes rack when several cell phones ring simultaneously around you and someone is talking on a phone. There are lots of shops, music, and museums. I loved the food which is Scandinavian but even if you don't like herring, cold cuts, and grav lox for breakfast, there are plenty of European and American restaurants to choose from.

    On my last day, I was taking the trolly to work. Right after I got on, three young stinky drunk men got on. There were plenty of seats vacant but of course, one of them plunked down right next to me. I turned my head towards the window and tried to close off my sinuses without pinching my nose. I suddenly heard a "pop" and then, gulp-gulp-gulping as he chugged down a tall can of beer. 

    I wanted to move so I motioned that I needed to get up. He stood cross-eyed on wobbly legs as I slid out. As I was walking away, it suddenly dawned on me that I had left my gloves on my seat. I turned around to retrieve them and as I approached my "friend,"  I saw him lean over where I had been sitting and throw up all over my gloves. I decided against asking him to hand them to me. Later that day in Stockman's (a famous Finish department store), I treated myself to a new pair of nice leather gloves.
  • in the government arena

    I am down to only one nurse in the clinic (I'm supposed to have 3). In our advertising for the position, I am "in the process" of hiring the only RN who applied. I knew of a physicians assistant (PA) who wanted to work so I modified the second RN position to try and accommodate her. We offered her the RN position too, only to discover bureaucracy and legal issues so I had to go push for changing the position to a PA. That means paying her more money but also, she can work in a greater capacity. I won't go into the details of all the obstacles but now in the final stages, it looks like I won and we are hiring her as a PA. Smooth talking persuader.

    As you know, we went to the inauguration celebration at Spasso House. The Embassy has been buzzing in anticipation of Hillary Clinton being sworn in as our Secretary of State. Her swearing in was to take place live via webcam in one of our conference rooms and all were invited. The technicians were unsuccessfully trying to get connected. After about 20 minutes and just before her speech, someone walked in and said, "Hey! They are broadcasting it live on CNN in the cafeteria!" We all raced there and watched on 2 large screen TV's. A new picture popped up on the wall. My new boss.

    I am preparing to go to Finland next week to see patients. There was a lot of wrapping up to do with the PA job, second round of interviews for the secretary position, hosting a representational meeting and lunch with my docs of other embassy health providers, and taking care of our patients. A busy week.