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Tag Archives: traveling

Facing Death Over Siberia

14 Sunday Jun 2015

Posted by sahbasan in airplane, Life events, Russia, Safety, Theater, Travels

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airplane, Russia, Safety, Theater, travel, traveling

Omsk TheaterIn the spring of 1992 I had the opportunity to travel to Omsk, Russia. I was part of the advanced crew that was sent to prepare for our adaptation of OUR TOWN to be put on in the Omsk Theater in Omsk, Siberia. While there were many things that made this trip memorable, the flight from Moscow to Omsk stands out. It’s not everyday a theater nerd like me finds himself convinced he is facing death.

The Omsk Theater arranged for a cargo plane to take us from Moscow to Omsk. We were assured that the cargo plane would be empty. They even said that the Omsk company masseuse would make the flight with us.

We learned quickly there were not going to be any in flight massages. There was no room. The cargo plane was in fact filled with cargo. Two cars, to be exact, filled the plane from cockpit to tail. The cars were pressed up against one side of the plane and on the other side were fold out wooded benches that had plenty of knee room if you were an emaciated 12 year old. None of us were. The Russian crew proceeded to load us into the cars for the trip. Picture if you will, three large Americans crammed into the back seat of a European sized car. That was the day I discovered I had claustrophobia. As the panic started to set in I calmly (that’s my story and I’m sticking to it) told them I had to get out of the car. I elected the lack of legroom over the lack of oxygen. So there I sat, with my knees pressed firmly into the side of the second car.

The Russian crew sat in the front smoking. About halfway through the flight we smelled gas. It became very overpowering. With the help of our interpreter we told them about the gas smell. With a heavy sigh, one of the Russians finally stood and headed to the back of the plane, his lit cigarette still dangling from his lips. It was at that perfect moment when I knew that this is how my story was going to end: in a giant ball of flame over the Siberian wilderness. Who would have guessed that I would go out in such a dramatic fashion? A faulty trap door in a set, I could see. A Phantom style falling chandelier would make sense. Getting a job on Spiderman the musical could be fatal. But going out in a giant ball of flame high over the Siberian wilderness was not something I’d worried about before.

Since you are reading this you’ve already guessed. We did not go up in a giant ball of flame. In fact it was all a bit anticlimactic. The Russian crew member calmly stuffed a rag in the hole that was supposed to have a gas cap. He went back to his fellow Russians, probably wondering why the Americans all looked so freaked out. What was for us a life threatening moment, was for him an interruption in his break.

Always Root For The Home Team?

12 Friday Jun 2015

Posted by sahbasan in Baseball, Life events, Sports, Travels

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Baseball, fan, Sports, traveling

When I moved from Milwaukee, Wisconsin to the North East I was presented with some big questions. Not the least of which is what baseball team do I follow. The Milwaukee Brewers have been my baseball home for decades. For most of my life I lived on Brewer brats with “secret stadium sauce”. I watched Milwaukee’s mascot, Bernie Brewer, slide his way into a vat of beer with each Brewer home run. I cheered during the big sausage race during the 7th inning stretch.

In 1987 I gladly stood in line as George Webb gave away free burgers in response to a Brewers 12 game wining streak. I sat in the stands on September 26, 2000 for the last night game in County Stadium and “oohed and aahed” at the fireworks display after the 4-7 win over the Reds. Let us not talk about the 8-1 loss on the last daytime game a couple of days later. During my married years the Brewers were as big a part of our lives as anything else. It was a fandom we shared. After my divorce the Brewers were a solace when they won and a distraction when they lost.

But baseball is a game that must be seen in person. Its poetry does not translate onto the TV. The cameras tell you where to look. You are forced to focus on the pitcher then the batter, then the fielders; where ever the ball travels. Baseball is more ballet than sport. One must observe the movement of the players as a whole. How do the outfielders move in anticipation of a hit? Do the infielders adjust based on what they know about the person at the plate? The potential energy builds in intensity until the crack of the bat. In a kinetic burst all ten players on the field leap into action at once.

Football is more of a television sport so the Packers are safe with my loyalty. I need the help of the camera to keep up with football. In the stands, even if you have good seats, for most of the game the players are far away and become just a mass of helmets moving back and forth. But the Brew Crew is in danger of loosing me.

One of my favorite things to do was to spontaneously hop a bus and head out for a game. That’s a little harder to do now that the stadium is 1200 miles away. Boston is only two and a half hours away so the Red Sox may be my new team. But does that make me a turncoat? I’ll be keeping my eye on Boston this season but I’m sure my heart will still flutter a bit with each Brewer win. I guess that makes me a Brewer ex-pat that roots for the Red Sox.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Webb_Restaurants

A Hoarder On The Move

08 Monday Jun 2015

Posted by sahbasan in Life events, Travels

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Hoarding, Moving, Packing, traveling

At the age of fifty-six I found myself preparing to move from Wisconsin to New Hampshire. This upcoming adventure of changing my life was looking to be an exciting time. Until I looked around the apartment I’d been living in for almost two decades. How could one person have gathered so much stuff into a small one-bedroom place? There were boxes lining the hallway, some of which had not been opened in over twenty years. There was no flat surface left uncovered by the piles on top of piles of stuff that I must have thought were crucial to my survival at one time. There was not a drawer or shelf that had escaped dangerous overloading. Fibber McGee’s closet was a wasteland compared to mine. I did not even want to think about the garage or storage space I also had overflowing with stuff. When had I become a hoarder? Over forty years of accumulation (I’m pretty sure I escaped hording for my first ten years or so) were staring me in the face, daring me to move it all 1200 miles east.

So I decided to purge myself of my belongings. I planned on being ruthless in my cleansing process. I’d like to say this idea came form a newfound Buddhist philosophy of shedding my dependence on things. Taking myself into my new chapter of life with less baggage allowing for a cleaner life style. I’d like to say that was my motivation but in truth, I just could not see physically moving all that stuff half way across the country. So I made it my goal to take only what I could carry in the back of my car.

That meant, of course, that I was going to have to exclude most of my things from the trip. Or get a larger car. So how do I chose what is worthy of space in my SUV? Furniture was my first consideration. The couch was what was left of a past life marriage. The coffee table lived on the streets for a short time before joining me. My dressers all had crippled joints. None of my furniture stood muster. Only the bed was regrettably left behind. I just could not see cruising along the highways with a queen-sized mattress and box spring strapped to the top of the car. Every box had to be gone through, every memory had to be weighed but over the course of a week I was able to pack up my books, DVD’s, clothing, and what little “junk drawer” extra items I was keeping. (Side note; I had ten boxes of DVD’s and one of photos. I know what’s important.)

And then the junk men came.

As self-imposed surrealistic events go, watching four large men carry away everything you once thought was important and toss it unceremoniously into a truck, is right up there on the Salvador Dali scale. It took about four hours to cart away Fifty-Six years of my life. Some of it destined to be sold. Some of it destined to be donated. But most of it headed to that great junk heap in the sky. I stood there watching my life being carted away like so much trash. Shortly after that I hopped into my fully loaded car and headed into the rising sun, ready to begin collecting my next life’s pile of stuff.

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