Tuesday, November 25, 2014

The monastery & Cathedral in Belem
I made it to Portugal last week, and after getting to my hostel I started a list of things that immediately berate your senses and remind you that America is long gone once you hop the pond. So here goes, you know you're in a European hostel when:

1)    Everyone speaks at least some English
2)    90% of the people are on a weekend getaway
3)    The milk is warm
4)    There is hot chocolate for breakfast
5)    The cornflakes haven't even got a hint of sugar
6)    Meeting people feels more awkward cn than ever
7)    The number one thing you ask for is the wifi password

Torre de Belem
I only had two days in Lisbon, so I left early on Sunday to make sure I would get to see as much as possible. I walked down to the waterfront and took the light rail west to Belem, a suburb that contains a few monuments, a market, and the largest free cultural center in the world. It contains so much art (and is larger than many of the Smithsonians in DC) that it ranks as the 50th most visited museum in the world, which is surprising considering how many of them must be located in Washington, New York, London and Paris. Turns out that Portugal is an art hotspot.

I walked along the waterfront, went to the museum, and then headed back into Lisbon for some more downtown exploring. Chiado and the other nearby neighborhoods that make up central Lisbon immediately reminded me of San Francisco and I was really happy to just wander for a few hours. The waterfront has been redeveloped and is full of pedestrian areas with benches and trees that locals are taking full advantage of. I found a wine and cheese bar/art gallery/restaurant in a converted warehouse and sat down for my first lunch in Europe (which was long overdue). I had a Portuguese pizza with ham and peppers and olives and sat watching sailboats out on the water.

Lunch on the water
As I always say, places that are off your radar, and you have few expectations for, always surprise you. They tend to be low key, pedestrian friendly, tasty, and generally a good middle ground in terms of grimy/sterile. What I mean by the last is that you want a city that hasn’t been trashed by the locals (Rome), or sterilized to draw tourists (lots of fake places). You need something that feels real, where you can smell the food (Malaga) and hear the local sounds (Fes). The point is, Lisbon does that. It gives you just enough of each, without overwhelming you (India), that you want to come back. It seems that this is a regular thing with Lisbon, people only pass through for a few days and then realize they should have stayed ages. Every article in the Huffington Post, New York Times, and Matador all were written by people who had been in transit and been so blown away by Lisbon they were adding it to their list of places to go back to when they next had the chance.


One last success of the day. When you travel, and I mean that in the truest sense of the word, you are trying to leave the predictable and ordinary behind. I realized at one point in a train station that I couldn’t remember what I had been thinking for the last two hours. No clue what was going through my mind. But I know it wasn’t work, it wasn’t applications, it wasn’t any of the stressful day to day things that we all seek to escape when we’re on the road. Lisbon gets a thumbs up and five stars for making me completely lose track of where I was in life for that afternoon.

The waterfront in Lisbon