Thursday, January 30, 2020

CH2. Life in Germany 1: A 75% Surprise and the New Year

Hello, Tim!
I had this random thought, about how contradictory it actually is, to have both chapters, and entries that start off with the format of a letter, but who says you cannot have both? This is a blog, a book, and a collection of letters. This is my life.
Staring the new chapter with a picture of me, looking bewildered, maybe?

A Surprise

I'll just get straight to the point: It was my birthday surprise. 
I guess no one would be expecting anything else, knowing that a change of chapter means another 365 days have passed in the Hugo calendar.
But I do have to concede that I should have been more aware after last week.
If you do recall, I was partly preparing for Johannes' birthday, not a couple days before mine. He was dragged out of the dorm and came back to a decorated kitchen. On the day before my birthday, I got a text from Johannes asking whether I was interested in a walk at around 20:30. He said it would take only about an hour or so. My brain cells must have been chilling on an imagined beach and couldn't/wouldn't be bothered by such, so the idea about it being a part of the surprise was only a fleeting thought, a speeding boat that thought less than once to stop by. Also my reasoning was that we would be back by ten in the evening, and nothing would be happening right then. We knocked on Abhidha's door, asking if she would be coming along as well, only to be met with "I'm actually a bit busy" for return.
It was minus one degree outside, and Yu, Johannes, and I were walking along the river, opposite to the direction of the city center, and nothing so grand was happening. Us three do this (strolling) more often than one would imagine.
Taking a round trip back to the dorm, into the elevator, Johannes told me told follow him as he wanted to show me a physical map for hiking he just got. Passing the door of the kitchen, though, he threw the kitchen door and shoved me right inside to the dimly-lit kitchen and dozens of people.
"Surprise!" I guess my whelp of surprise was drowned out by the chorus of shouting and smiling people. Abhinav was standing next to the oven, Yu on the other side of the room. Abhidha standing by the door, smiling mischievously (she did most of the decoration, I guess), and Emma was holding her phone at me, apparently filming. And oh Choong was also there.
My brain cells pushed up their sunglasses and sat up, registering after five seconds or so to finally come to the revelation that my classmates (both living off- and on-campus) were there as well. In the center stood Emily, Costanza, Martìn, and Zaineb (who apparently arranged the coming of my classmates) who were also grinning widely.
I know that I was standing a bit awkward for the next five to ten minutes or so, after having thanked everyone for their kindness and thoughtfulness. But then the cake came into the kitchen, and Zaineb told me that she obviously made both of the ice cream cakes herself, one a chocolate, the other a caramel, toffee, and cream.
When trying to cut the cake, Johannes wished in once again with his new one-time toy, and blasted the confetti - all over the cakes. Harish was quick to capture this moment.

Yazdan presented me a bottle of melon liquor (which was gifted by someone, I still have to ask about it) and asked me to take a big gulp. It was 20% in alcohol volume, and I did have a gulp, but it was burning afterwards. The melon sirup was not bad, though. After the birthday song (and I always sing along on my birthdays) and the distribution of the cake, I decided that it was only fit that I present my gratitude to the collective altogether.
It was actually quite chaotic when taking the picture.

Classmates and Martìn (whom we have known since the first day)

Again, I still am not good at giving public talks, no matter how long, to whom, about what the speech is presented. I always have this unpleasant fluttering in my stomach, but I had to try to get over it. I talked about how chances brought me over to Heidelberg to meet so many nice people. I promised that I want to, in the following year that is yet to come, become a person I would like more, and I hope the same for everyone present. I know that I had stuttered but did an okay job. The other day, Abhinav thought that I was drunk when giving the speech, not knowing that there was nothing to do with the alcohol.
The music went on, and I "moved" a bit with the people (I refuse to say that I danced; that would be an insult to the verb) as Martìn taught us some Spanish dance moves. Johannes was somehow visibly drunk already. With a slurring accent he was trying to get Abhidha to join Martìn's little dancing seminar, but we had a lot of fun nonetheless. ("On a scale of one to ten, how drunk was I yesterday?" Abhidha: "A hundred.")
It was an intriguing view to see people from my class interacting with the people from my dorm, like two waves from different directions clashing against each other in a friendly fashion. 
Drunk Johannes popped a balloon. Loud. Emily squeaked. Abhidha covered her ears. Choong popped another one.
Why did I say it was a 75% surprise? It was some afterthought after the party that gave me the revelation that there were indeed some tell-tale signs that previewed this planned event. After the class of Tuesdays, Zaineb and I normally walk back to our dorm together. This time, however, she told that she needed to go in another direction without any explanations; Walking through the corridor of the apartment, I passed Abhinav's door, only to see Harish walking out, hand held fast on the doorknob with the door behind his back. Abhidha walked out of the kitchen and saw the incident unroll, and the edges of her mouth pulled up involuntarily.
The clock showed 11:59, and my friends counted down once again. Johannes gave me a compass, reminiscent to my instagram account. Abhidha gave me a fondue kit, and I promised her we are going to make it together. There will also be a cooking book coming from Emily.
Sometimes I get this feeling that I am just too lucky to get to meet such great and caring people again and again. All the preparation, all the thoughtfulness behind it, and all the good wishes. I thank them.
Great.

Happy Birthday, me. Here you see people who really are nice to you. Don't change (change for the better if necessary), and be grateful, and have fun living.

The Lunar New Year 

The lunar new year is a big deal in Taiwanese tradition. On the day, families gather around and sit around the table to have dinner, enjoying each other's company.
This year, the year 2020, the year of the rat, was the first lunar new year that I'm not spending with my family. Strangely, it was not homesickness that I was feeling, though. Instead, I just had this desire to do something matching what my mother and her family would be having.
I had decided to make some hot pots, and I am inviting all the Taiwanese people over. So that was what I did. Apparently, the people had the same thought so the plan was running rather smoothly. We assigned who was supposed to get what, and after my classes finished at one in the evening, I started cooking. The base of the hot pot was heated up, and I submerged the tofu inside for the flavor to soak in. I left for the supermarket tp get some chicken breast and eggs. In the kitchen all alone (with some occasional visit from Abhinav), I hacked the chicken up, added some seasoning to the meat mix, and made them into the size of human eye balls (I was trying to find a fitting simile, but apparently I failed) Making them into meatballs, I planned to put them into the soup. I went on chopping away the vegetables along with the time. I let it boil and simmer, careful not to let it overflow. 
Next time I will mix in some shredded carrots and celeries because even though the taste was good, the  bland white color of cooked chicken wasn't looking appetizing.

I used some time in between to text Choong, from whom I just learnt that the Koreans also celebrate the lunar new year, was also invited to our get-together. He sounded a bit home-sick, and this is the kind of emotion we wish to wipe away with the dinner. Jackie, by the way, was joined by his visiting family and left for Paris already.
It was a bless sometimes to have the whole kitchen to myself.

Yu's girlfriend came over to Germany to visit, bringing with another soup and saved the potential problem of having not enough for a group of twelve.

Look at the spicy hot pot cooking.

People started coming, and Aliang arrived with her pot of braised pork that she said would make, and my three pots of soup were mostly ready at the time.
People sat around the table, and Johannes started first, given that he is the eldest at the table and that is how table etiquettes work in Taiwanese traditions. It was a bit awkward at first, people from different buildings, different floors of the campus suddenly sitting together at the table, eating together. But then the warmth from the soup melted the ice (or not) and it was a great relief for me. It gave me the impression that the food presented at the table was mostly appreciated by the guys. 
Selfie :D

By the end of the hot pot, most of us were already blending in well already. I was glad that it turned out well anyway.
From the kitchen perspective; I guess this is what my mother sees from the kitchen every year at this time.
On the second day, Johannes and I had the remaining hot pot with rice while watching some live winter sports (I willingly let him hijack my computer that was initially brought over to the kitchen for studies)

End

As always, I am running a bit late for the deadline, but hey, that's the life of a university student.
There is also a part where I am supposed to talk about the visit to Uncle Nic's friend in Mannheim for dinner with another German family. It was a self-furnished house with a swing in the middle. I had a small sip of Kavalan whiskey and it was really overwhelming. 

Yours sincerely,
Hugo





Saturday, January 25, 2020

CH1. Life Goes On 33: Eberbach and the Bridge (to the Second Chapter)

Hello, Tim!
I am no longer sure whether I have included it or not (not that I am going to check at the point) but for this block in the university, we only have classes on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays. That sounds like a splendid treat from the school, but in reality, it can also have catastrophic consequences if you simply see it as a merit. This Tuesday, for example, I did practically nothing in the educational sense. What followed on Wednesday was that there was no difference than having class on another Monday, for the Tuesday was itself a virtual weekend.
In between the weekdays there were also some side projects made; Onion cakes made by Johannes and I.

I made the dough!

Guys who decided to throw a LAN party (whatever that should mean) in the kitchen. We had fun.

Weekly Hike: Eberbach - Zwingenberg, 22km

Up until now, the hiking with Johannes has been a weekly event; an energy-drawing, time-consuming, but incredibly fulfilling event.
The highest point of the week required a 650 meter hike in altitude. There was this site that gives hikers recommendation as to where to go to, the length, and what to see along the way. In thirty minutes of train-riding distance, east to Heidelberg, There is a city called Eberbach. That was where our trail commenced at roughly 10:30 in the morning. Upon entering the train, our tickets were checked. The semester ticket I bought was certainly a good investment. During the ride, Johannes gave me a previewing lecture on the place we would be going to, same time talking about how we are crossing the lines of different states of Germany. The sun hadn't really shown itself as the train railed its way toward our starting point. Along the way, I heard a small scoff coming from Johannes, a smirk crawling on his face. I didn't inquire on what it was about.
Our website provided that the whole trail will be 19 kilometers long. It unsettled me a bit at first, to be honest. After the 40 km walk in Strasbourg, of course, I shouldn't have to worry, but I really don't want to be the person opposite to able-bodied and unable to catch up. The interesting thing was, when you really got into a pace and started soaking in your surroundings, you would forget that you even are moving your feet. The track started with a series of zigzagging among trees, fallen or standing strong in the chilly winter. 

Not ten minutes into the lonesome crowds of trees, we came across a tower, brick walls half-crumbling, overtaken by moss. It was a combination of walls, greens, and muddy pathways, beckoning people to see what they don't normally see. I was walking around the structure, taking in the silent beauty that wrapped up this once-inhabited building. Until I heard Johannes' voice, presumably coming from the opposite side of one of the walls. I thought he was ready to get a move on, so I called out to him, only to draw another sound from him. It was... above. Apparently, there was a case of stairs, steep, but leading you to the top of the fortress. He was there staring down at me.

We continued on as I looked curiously at the moss that crawled its way up and over the landscape, how it differed in two variations(or was it three or more?). There were white sprinkles on the withering leaves that descended from the oak trees. At first, I thought it was more likely to be mold rather than anything else, and I was still a skeptic when Johannes told me they were little ice shards. Miniature hail, to be precise.

The meander among trees led us ultimately to a tower, much higher than the one we saw when we headed for the Thingstätte. Several people, bodies wrapped in warm jackets, were already coming out from the tower; We were not the only early ones, as it turned out. Right next to the tower we came to the highest point of the area: the Katzenburkel. I thought about having our first food break on one of the flatter rocks, but the wind was directly blowing in our face when standing on the rocks of the peak, with which inactivity would bring the felt coldness to a next level. We then resolved to climb the tower and had our break high up there. On the bricky parapet were several metal plates bolted to the surface, showing the direction and distance of the neighboring cities. The fog had yet to disperse due to our early arrival. Johannes thought it a pity, but I actually like the obscurity that the fog cast upon the land when you see it from above.
Looking afar

We were walking among the woods as Johannes identified the trees for me, "We have time for some lessons," He said. Firs, beeches, oaks, red peaches, cherry trees. I tried to knead the characteristics of each kind of trees into my head, but I think it would take more time than that. I wasn't the one in the hunter's school, was I? But sure did it feel closer to the nature, now that I know what I was seeing. Along the track, there were also upended dirt that haphazardly littered the sideways. Sometimes a deeper hole, sometimes a downward slope that looked like a heavy object was dragged down from the slanted side paths. Johannes identified the disturbed dirt pits as the trails from the wild boars, simultaneously admiring the indication of how many wild boars there were. True, when you look up the coat of arms of the place Eberbach, you would see a wild boar walking on a blue ribbon which I guess would be a small brook. More interestingly so, the word "Eber" in German practically means "Male pig", while the word "bach" isn't referring to the musician, but a German word for "brook, creek". It is a quite straightforward way of naming, I thought to myself. The fir trees were all-surrounding, we're heading up or descending, you see the trees ever present with their majestic heights. 
A road that led us
Along

It reminded me of the song from my goddess of French songs (insert dramaticism here), a song called Les Séquoias, a song about how sad it was to have the sequoia trees cut down, and I half-whistled as we continued down the lane. It needed no further inquiry to see that the trees, the dirt, and the nature is way elder than I am. The trees stood there impassively, unseen eyes transfixed on a tall German guy and a relatively-shorter Taiwanese, with not intimidation, but curiosity.

Drinkable fountain of the highest altitude in the area

Moving on, we walked across multiple grassy fields that weren't quite of characteristic for winter, hills where oxen, horses, and bulls munched on grass in their respective enclosures, villages that were quite empty presumably because it was church Sunday. The horses kept by the locals were not kept in stables, for when they have this expanse of grass for them to mound on, dried hay won't always be required, and it was way more liberating to have them out in the open, in my opinion.
Beware of the electric wires
Look it's a llama

We happened to wander off-course for a while with the faulty GPS that didn't always.
Weaving back into the forests, there came from the sky a sound that resembled the rain; neither of us was prepared for rain, but as the sound continued on, I noticed the drops on us, though falling at the speed of water droplets, they were actually tiny ice shards, meaning that it was a hail that came upon us. It was still not quite snow, but as a progressive storyline that is pushing forward. One day, I told Johannes, one day, I will see snow for sure. If it doesn't come, I am heading for it.
Let it be my retirement house.
Too soon?

Abhinav called to check in on us, and as he and Johannes did their everyday trash talk, he knelt down so suddenly in a single swift motion, signaling that I do the same. I crouched down to an eye level same as his and squinting my eyes, willing myself to see whatever I was to see. We were silent and still, not hearing anything else aside from the falling hail and the rustling of the leaves blown by the leaves. We were facing a slope bathed in sunlight, trees poking out in rows, paving a virtual path of dried grass heading upwards. And then I saw it. In the middle of the path stood a roe deer, stationary, perfectly still, occasionally bending its neck for a mouthful of grass. With the light brown of its hide, it was practically camouflaged in the wild. 80 meters apart (according to Johannes' estimation) it wouldn't be able to see us or sense us if we don't make big and sudden movements.  There was another trail above the deer, and a man walked past it without noticing it. Johannes also remarked how easy it would be for him to shoot it had he had his rifle with him. We knelt for five minutes, and we stood up. The deer noticed us finally, and retreated into a more concealed bush.
We came to the last part of the hike. There was a sign put in front of us: Wolfsschlucht in Zwingenberg ... Access at your own risk... .

It is the valley of the wolf (as implied by the name) and there is a downward-heading stone path. We went down.
A hunter's wooden stand.

We hadn't seen the valley itself as we heard the singsong of a creek already, but continuing down the series of steps so steep that you can almost call it a slide, we saw it on our left-hand side, a constant flow of water coming from between the rocks that form the walls that were surrounding us. The walls that formed the valley. Antiquated, edgy, transfixing... rocky.

It looks way better than it smelled, this small stream of water trickling out from between the rocks

A primitive beauty it was.

I understood why the sign had to be put, for the small stream and the humidity can make the trail slippery, and since there were part of the track with quite a steep fall, and with the spiky logs that were leaning against the walls of the valley and the rocks embedded in the soil over the river, you are getting more than just a scratch if you do fall. There were anchor cables in some parts, providing an extra holding for safety. But I had to laugh out loud when we were blocked by two logs that fell over right above the only track, for it was morbidly entertaining to think about what this track was demanding us to do.

It was us with the nature, as close as can be. 
At around the end of the Wolfvalley, we came to a castle sitting on what we call the Neckar valley, and we thought that we missed the main entrance by a corner and missed the chance to check it out. Reaching back down to the ground, it felt like I still had some stamina remaining for several more kilometers of walk but was nonetheless exhausted. The train took us home in another forty minutes or so, along with the muddy shoes and pants, and a pair of eyes, wide open.
Again, this was the trail recorded by Johannes' GPS-installed watch.



Outing with Classmates

Throughout the week, Zaineb suddenly had the idea of visiting the castle with a view of the sunset. As the party planner kind of person, she managed to send messages to a dozen of people, calling for assembly on a day without any classes. Emily, Zaineb, and I met up on campus and took the tram over to the city center. It was another fifteen-minute walk until we met up with a group of American exchange students living together in an apartment off-campus. We kicked off our little hike and started up the paved stoney road to the castle. I learned that Emily, Zaineb, and Choong, the guys who've been in Heidelberg for as long as I am, have never been up to see the castle. At first, it was quite shock for me, for that was unimaginable at first, being in proximity with the castle and never really seeing it for what the castles has to offer.
I must have been up here for more than eight time until now. Still I take pictures.


But it always is a different story when you come with different people.

It was a moderate walk up to the castle, going in the opposite direction to that of the sun. It was the same sight, same buildings from afar, and possibly the same trees, under that same sky, dawny but constant. The sun continued its downward course, crooning the streetlights from their sleep. It was a serene scene, and even though the ball of sun was hidden behind a small hill, we still watched as the radiating light dimmed and dispersed. 
Emily looking in the distance.

Also the first time visiting the pharmacy museum of the castle

Taking the mountain train downwards

Johannes' Birthday 

After three unproductive hours spent in the library, I packed my stuff into my bag and sulked feebly to the exit of the small library of the school. Clusters of chattering were ringing in the background, but it was of no concern to me. Some movements with familiar shapes did catch my attention when leaving the library, and it was Harish and Yu, with Yu hanging some bags by the wrists, and Harish carrying a big, highly eye-catching box that had ... cake in it. I called out to them, startling them for a temporal second. They explained to me how this all was not supposed to be known by Johannes, for it would be a surprise party thrown for him. I personally prepared a gift for him (which was a box of Ronnefeldt tea assortment), but I wasn't really thinking about anything big-scale. Nonetheless, when a plan was already in the making, there was absolutely no sense in bringing a finger to the tally and sticking it into the pie.
On the day before his birthday, Harish came to me and told me the finalized plan of theirs (Abhinav and I spent some good thirty minutes inflating and filling up the balloons for dun): The balloons were prepared, the cake in place; all they needed would be a diversion of attention, and since asking me to drag him out for a walk was no longer plausible (it was also the same day we went out for a walk) so they ultimately resorted to bring him to a bar near the center. Here came then the catch: A person would be needed to stay behind and really put some thoughts on the decoration. I was the person. At the very first moment, I was frowning upon the plan when Harish presented it (Such emotions were like ink blots on a blank sheet - clear and visible on my face which I never conceal such well) and I first thought about how far the bar actually is from the dorm and how things could go wrong should they fail to take the last tram before midnight; I thought that was the flaw I was seeing in the plan that made me disconcerted, but afterwards when I looked back on this, I think it was a certain part of malcontent with my role in the plan that started the inner cloudy drizzle. I am not good at decoration, and maybe a part of me was more willing to head together to the bar to chat and have fun instead of presenting something underwhelming or... unpresentable. I hated to have these selfish thoughts in my head that just was too adamant to disperse, especially when I am on a post that was supposed to be of importance; I wasn't even the main character of the day! 
With the help of the people I was working with on the decoration, luckily, I pulled myself out of the seemingly endless rumination of negativity.With Abhidha throwing out interesting ideas by turning ribbons into letters that spelled out JOHANNES, I then told myself that we HAD to make the decorations work. Aaron, Yazdan, and Chelsey joined in, and this was the end result; it was not much, but we made do with what we had. In total, there were thirty balloons that indicated the age of the celebrated. At around eleven forty-five, Yu and Harish rushed back to get the cake prepared. From the door of the elevator came the normal raucous commotion that always follow Abhinav and Johannes around when they are together. And then he came into the room. His reaction was expected, a big dramatic "Wow what a surprise" followed by a big smile; It was as if he knew everything was happening but he still appreciated the whole effort put inside it. Later we learned that he knew about the surprise because he saw the pack of balloons in Abhinav's room and, come on, getting dragged out until fifteen minutes before your birthday? You smell the fishiness kilometers away from here.
The cake was presented and cut, candles blown, speeches given. I like the idea of having so many people so close together on the same floor.
The letters on the wall was Abhidha's idea.

Most of the Taiwanese people I know over here were there as well

I will miss the guys here...

Happy birthday, Johannes.

End

Chapter One came along after the graduation. It was a random thought to turn my life into chapters. It doesn't make the most sense but still does to an extent when I move on to the next chapter on the week of my birthday, meaning that we have to put a halt to this chapter. 
Life being divided into chapters; it is going on nonetheless.

Best regards,
Hugo









Monday, January 13, 2020

CH1. Life Goes On 32: One True Passion for Books and a Hike

Hello, Tim!
As I am writing this, I am already back in Germany for a week. It feels great to be back, getting responsible once more for my own life, but it still takes some time to get back into the mindset I had three weeks ago. I would have to make this a rather short letter even though there are still tons of things to write about, as always.
Two topics, maybe.
Three, at most.

The Hike

In the middle of one of the classes, I received a text from Johaness, who was apparently in or around our dorm, asking if I would be free on Saturday late afternoon. Curious of what he was having in mind, I replied with a yes and inquired further. As it turned out, he was planning to do a hike and asked whether I was interested in coming along. He showed me a natural sight-seeing place among the mountainy areas around the castle, presented as a little spot on Google Map. It was called the Felsenmeer, the "Stone Sea" literally. He said that he hadn't been there before and would want to visit it in this hike, connecting it with the Königstuhl, one of the most famous mountain peaks in Heidelberg, and going back down. Being more than two months apart from the previous hike with the other guys of the sixth floor, I was really more than ready for anything. It was about time to pick up this thread of connection with Nature, anyway.
Starting on time, we took the train to the mountain feet and started at around one in the afternoon. The wind was gently traveling, picking up whenever it felt like doing so. I wore only a long-sleeved T-shirt with the sun kneading its heat into the land beneath it like you would to salt into a piece of dough. Still, knowing that the wind will get the best of me sooner or later, I had another of my shirts prepared. The ground from below was a bit wet and muddy, most of the footing being a mixture of soil and fallen leaves that were decomposing. I told Johannes that it was good to have worn my old pair of shoes thanks to his forewarning before leaving the dorm.
Along the way

My left knee was hurting a bit from the jog that was decide on a whim from the previous day (which was another story) but minutes into the walk, it was more like a dull thud in my bones and was rather easy to ignore. The mossy stones were scattered around the hillside where you can see from the sides.  They had definite edges and corners, something you would guess coming from a person's hands. You might overlook them when you get a bit too absorbed with where you should be landing your feet, but when you have a friend who's been engaging in such activities for years, the person would be giving you a headsup and tell you when and what to look at. 
Fungi, for example.


On a Saturday morning, it wasn't really realistic of me to expect to casually see people doing the same track, but when we reached what seemed like a privately-owned warehouse for log-harvesting machineries with a drinkable water fountain next to it, we started seeing several people coming and going. On the mountains all are equal on the same height, and we acknowledged one other's presence when eyes met. With the directions carved onto the stones, we were able to navigate our way (it was more of what Johannes did, given that I still don't really have a so-called sense of direction) towards the Felsenmeer. Reaching around 400 meters of altitude (with the even ground of the Heidelberg city being of an altitude of 100 meters or so) the pathway, though maintain the same width, narrowing down and widening up again occasionally, we were more weaving among the natural mossy stones, contrasted by how we were only walking by them next to the track in the beginning. 
Landmarks on the way.

At one point, the soil became really muddy, and even though I did say that my pair of shoes were old, I didn't really want to have wet socks as well. The directions from the dwarfish stones pointed us to a marked area that told us we were about to enter a natural preservation area. No feeding the animals, no riding horses, keep your dogs on leash, etc. it read. On the downward slope we treaded down, taking in the sceneries. Supposedly this was the work of a glacier that was there when no one was there to witness, but the bigger-than-head-sized rocks were piling and scattering, the moss atop marking the static position they were set in place long, long time ago. Still, the rocks altogether painted a picture of unmoving activity that made people stop and appreciate the office done by the nature. 
It feels like a little push can upend everything.

There was another sign at the entrance of the Felsenmeer, and when we came back to the entrance, it told us we were just another kilometer until reaching the highest peak of Heidelberg, the Königstuhl ("the King's Chair," by the way) Continuing up, the knotty feeling in my thighs were more stark, but I was holding well together.
Upon arrival in Heidelberg three months ago, there were different people telling me about the peak and the view down below you get from high on top, I was finally there. There was a hotel still under construction, three TV towers (two of which was likely to be from the US military), and many tourists coming from either the other tracks that were connected to the location or simply from the mountain train. But the view was gorgeous. You really see everything from above - the castle, the garden, the houses - even the school was not hard to spot! Close to three in the afternoon, the sun was actually about to set in an hour or so, but the remnants of its golden warmth was still bathing the places where our feet were set. Johannes handed me two apples for snack - sweet with the floral scent resembling a pear, somehow.

We took the mountain steps back down the ridges. With the thighs and the kneecap thrumming, it was  actually more uncomfortable (agonizing) to hike downwards than heading up once again, and the fear for losing ground and tumbling down in a rolling fashion was way more present, making it an excruciating effort to pay attention to where your next step should be put. Through the castle, down the stairs, we were back again in the Altstadt. Deciding that walking back would be a perfect way to relax the strained muscles, we set off again. With Johannes' GPS-connected watch, we could retrace our steps and the roads taken on a digital map, and here it is.
With the Königstuhl being the peak, we hiked up for about 567 meters in total.

With some self-evaluation, I would say that I was catching up fine in the slopes. Seemed like Johannes will have more plans for hiking in the future, mentioning one with picnic and more than twelve hours involved, I would feel inclined to join.

Dear Evan Hansen: The Novel

Wow, it really has been for some time. I didn't realize I was that far away from books until this week. Sure, I had noticed the pattern even two years ago: I had been buying books in England, but I never really sat down and read one there. It was almost the same here in Germany.
It wasn't just about the school work. Also the time I wanted to spend with the guys in the dorm and the classmates alike. The time I spent in kitchen, cooking the whole daylight away. It is the minutes piled up pining over the same papers I could get myself to finished. The hours whittled away talking and watching stupid videos on Youtube. It's the time I transcript and filter my mind onto the blog. The feeling of needing to belong with the people back in Taiwan. My family. My friends.
My books.
When asked to scribble a list that has all your preoccupations of the day, everyone would be pulling out their own list in no time. The only difference that was there for me at this moment would be whether you saved some space for books.
Reserving a small piece of the pie doesn't work for me, either. There was a time I used to mandate myself into reading thirty minutes a day, but a lot of the time would be spent dozing off because I would set the reading time too close before bedtime.
I can only make it seen all the time. Books has been and will always be -but with a matter of magnitude- a source to my food for thought. I beat myself up with a sense of dread when I consider to have read too little, and that is a quality I wish not to lose. See it, as a part of saving some time for yourself and the words of the author.

Dear Evan Hansen was originally a play written by Steven Levenson. It talked about how an assigned letter became the core of a torrid cyclone that swept Evan Hansen's life, for better or for worse.
The book, through the eyes of the protagonist, expounded on the matters of depression, the need to be understood, be seen but be hidden. We are lucky people not to be exploited by the mental disease, but the depicted lonesomeness can be either resonating or contagious. You'd catch a glimpse of how the people around you don't seem to have the capacity to get where you're coming from, feeling like nobody when compared to the others. Not every one has gone through the same "I'm invisible" phase and not every troubled soul has outlived the false realization, but this is a book that is telling you that there will always be someone behind you, someone you will find if you know to turn your head and look, that your feelings are valid, and that you will be found.
I once watched the recordings of the Broadway show starring Ben Platt, and it got me a bit emotional with the soundtrack that I chose to listen to during reading the book.
It took me around several hours in three sittings to finish the book, and there were some parts that were really painful that I had to temporarily put down the book and really let out a pent-up breath.
I am the drama king when reading, after all.

End

I think it would be nice to tighten up the strings of my mind here- I know there are somethings like the delayed flight from Taiwan and my departure, the incident that led to the white wheels on my new luggage case, etc. to hammer and titter about, but it is time to put my uploading back on schedule.
Chapter one would be ending soon.
Sunset at four.


Sincerely,
Hugo


CH1. Life Goes On 30&31: Ending with Strasbourg and Taiwan

Hello, Tim!
I am still waiting for my phone to upload the photos of the last photo, but I already feel the need to kickstart my next one, which should be the one recounting the past week, most importantly, my life back in Taiwan. There will be a part where I (still) talk about Strasbourg, and I want to finish it before I get back in Germany, for Johannes has been teasing me on and on about writing something so far back.
Let's just get to it.