Our Day In Bruges

Success.  Today has been the best day since yesterday; something I’ve said pretty much every day of this trip.  It’s not possible to see all the Bruges sights in a day, but we did see everything on our short list. 

We started the day out with Belgian waffles in a Häagen-Dazs cafe, mine was topped with freshly amazing strawberries. After breakfast, we rented a couple of bikes and set off on an adventure around and out of town.  

Bruges is a bit hectic of a town.  There are people walking, bikes, cars, horse drawn carriages, and all on classically narrow European roads.  Riding bikes through old town is harrowing enough with the traffic, the cobblestone bumpiness makes it even more unpleasant on the butt.  Belgium does a really great job of providing bike paths outside and around the city, especially in new(er) town areas.  

Our bike ride on the path along the canal and into the city of Damme was bliss. Other than a few close encounters with motorcycles on the cycling path, there wasn’t much other traffic to speak of.  The bike path paralleled a branch off from the canal so that we were next to water and ducks on the left, and well kept farmland and cows on the right. Our majestic calm lasted the entire 8 kilometer ride. Damme was much more quiet and slower paced than Bruges, just what the doctor ordered.

Adrenalin made up for the fact that our legs weren’t in bike riding shape, a price we would pay in full after the rides were finished.  The rental bikes came with a wheel lock & key below the seats, making it very easy for us to find a parking spot for the bike and wander as we wished.  Damme had much for us to see: old wind mills, a classic church w/modern cemetery, and a nice little pub where we each had a beer and split some fish and chips.

Here’s a fun fact!  Some European countries frown upon two people ordering a single dish and splitting it.  Our waitress in Damme, for example, she did not approve.  All of the food was placed in front of Brianna as if I wasn’t going to eat any of it.  She practically barricaded it away from me with the salt and pepper shakers.  Funny thing is, I’m the one who ordered the food, not Brianna!  Much to their dismay, we did split the food.  We left a sorrow filled 5 euro tip to mend the fence.

366 steps to the Belfry top.  It’s a lot of steps to walk up if you’re not used to walking like we are.  Also, it’s a lot of fucking steps, even if you’re used to walking as much as we are. Our fortitude in navigating the narrow staircase and the overcrowded nature of said narrow staircase was rewarded with a stunning view of the city.  Worth it.  Hundreds of years worth of history speak to you through to walls as if they were recently born.  Appreciate how many people died

creating that magnificent structure.  Appreciate how many people lived to ensure the creation of that magnificent structure. Appreciate how many people died in the power struggles in and around all of these structures.  This is the power that properly old European cities intoxicate us with, history.  History has a lot to teach us.

Have you ever heard of the Basilica of the Holy Blood?  As a former Catholic, it was top of my list to see and Brianna was supportive.  The trick to seeing the Holy Blood is making sure you arrive at the right times, 10:30am-11am or 2pm-4pm.  

Brianna and I didn’t have to pay for entrance to the Basilica, as it’s a Catholic Church.  I did take the opportunity to pay 2 euro for a .50 cent donation candle to light and say a prayer on in front of the throne of the holy blood. As a non-religious person, I still find value to prayer and reflection. The difference is probably that I’m not praying to a God. If God does exist, it either doesn’t care what I might pray for, already knows what I’m going to pray for, or some combination of the two. 

Perhaps even more surprisingly than my own pseudo-religious experience was the one Brianna had. She made the comment that even though she knew nothing about any religions, the experience and atmosphere of the Church almost brought her to tears. She and I are often on or close to the same page, the emotional atmosphere was real.

The Holy Blood rests inside a display case on an alter. Just a few steps up the alter and you’re standing face-to-face with what appears to be a vial of blood and the priest praying behind it.  Such a powerful moment.  It’s not because the vial is the blood of Jesus Christ – I live in the age of the internet and have been trained to question EVERYTHING.  The moment is powerful because of the energy surrounding the sacred object.  A symbol only has the power which we grant it, be it a cross, a flag, or anything else. We visited the altar with the Holy Blood and stayed a while longer to admire the Basilica’s many pieces of stained glass, painted, and sculpted art.

A guided canal boat tour and some chocolate shopping capped the end of what was nothing short of a great day in Bruges. We even found a quick minute to try a flight of beers at the Flanders brewery. Tonight we watch the In Bruges movie until we pass out on the abnormally hard bed with disturbingly small pillows. 

To Amsterdam!

Amsterdam & Thank You

Traveling from Belgium to Amsterdam was a real treat. We rode first class from Brussels to Amsterdam on a high speed train. People from home were texting us to remark on how amazingly fast our dots were moving in the Find My Friends app.  The intention wasn’t to buy first class tickets, sometimes they just work out to be cheaper than the second class tickets.  In retrospect, this may be the reason we didn’t get yelled at in the story from my earlier post.

Also, I semi-takeback what I wrote about the Belgian train system.  They are our least favorite train system, but they are not as bad as the first impression in Brux-Noord led us to believe. 

It’s worth noting that every country handles train station security in their own way.  Most of the train stations we encountered didn’t seem to care who got on trains or if they had tickets.  Amsterdam was the first train station that forced Brianna and I to scan our tickets before exiting or entering the building.  Amsterdam also has a large number of police to help ensure drugs are not trafficked in or out of the city. Much has stayed the same but parts of the city have changed a lot since my last visit in 2005.  It’s still a largely dirty city, trash and pornography wise.  It’s just a bit cleaner, perhaps even more transparent.  They wear their seedy underbelly on their upperbelly and ask zero forgiveness for it.

Brianna and I’s Amsterdam shortlist of things to do was really short.  We arrived just after 3pm on Wednesday and had to catch a 0802 train back to Germany Thursday morning. Just enough time for food, the Anne Frank house tour, and some wandering.

Visiting the Anne Frank house was unquestionably worth our quick trip into Amsterdam.  Listening to everything that Anne and her family went through to try and stay alive is a twisted tale of human ingenuity & love meet fanatical devotion & hate.  

Being in the Anne Frank house brought me  back to my 2006 trip to Auschwitz, memories I had not thought much on in some time. Bringing together the macro scale of Auschwitz and the micro scale of Anne Frank’s story is deeply impactful. I hadn’t realized that Anne Frank & family were first sent to Auschwitz upon capture.

I’ve heard the stories before.  You’ve heard the stories before.  Having been there doesn’t help me understand or make sense of what happened any better than you can.  It does remind me how important it is to remember the past.  Appreciate what has happened, is happening, and how it will happen again. I think about what my family’s roles in the wars were back then and I think about what roles I’ve played and am playing now.

Thank you to everyone who has been reading our trip stories.  It’s been fun writing them and even more fun getting the random feedback and thoughts from those who have sent comments, love, and other messages our way.  We are safely back in Germany with our BFFs for the night and will start the long journey back to the US tomorrow morning.  Flight to Iceland, 7 hour layover, flight to Detroit.

We love you all <3 and will be seeing you real soon!!!