Suddenly it came – perhaps with the ‘wind of change’, comrades – making its way through the hot, stiff midday air, with a little help from a feeble, yet fresh brush of air, it reached my exceedingly sensitive nose and instantly I knew: it’s that time of the year again. According to the calendar it is known as ‘summer’, but in Russia we prefer to call things by their right names: the smelly season. And today, as this sweaty wave of aroma came upon me, I could not help but to ponder for a short while on the philosophy of personal hygiene a la Russe. During 70 years of Soviet Union, here they didn’t sell any deodorants [the first time I heard this I was shocked], they didn’t have washing machines, let alone detergent [once again, shocked], and most people lived in communal apartments, which meant having to share a bathroom with an average of 5 other people, making morning showers more a matter of luck then personal choice [this makes me feel bad for complaining about having shared showers with half of Asia – China, Japan, Korea, Vietnam, check!]. If people here still smell like this now – with all of the sanitary luxuries of modern life mentioned above – then how did they smell 20 years ago? Though being a writer of a no means meager imagination, not even my mind can fathom the widths such an odor must have reached, the depths it must have crawled out of, the facial expressions it must have caused fellow passengers on the trolleybus to make… but then again, maybe not? Maybe there were no strained lips, no frowning noses on the public transport during the hottest days of May back in 1973? Sometimes it seems to me that Russians are immune to all stenches, good and bad alike. They relentlessly shower in J’adore Dior before stepping out of their house (seemingly obliviously to the fine and finite rules of perfume wear – to accent your own body odor, not to stain the walls). Their stomachs never turn upside down when they approach doors of the university dining hall, which is the very spot where I always asked myself one of the ‘cursed questions’: why did I choose a Russia – a country where everything reeks – when I have such a highly responsive and perceptive nose?
Come on, cut this country some slack! For Christ’s sake, they’re only just getting used to it! And don’t be so hard on other people – turn the other cheek (and your nose in the other direction)! After all, Russia smells a lot better now then she did when I first arrived.
Anyway, more importantly ‘the smelly season of 2008’ is finally coming together for me. I got letters of approval from both the Swedish Embassy in Moscow and the dean of my faculty back home at GU [Go, Slavic Languages, Go!] that I’m all set for taking three exams in Russian literature there on the 16th of June. I’m still not very well-prepared, though all I do is preparing for the exams, yet I am not disciplined at all, despite making a schedule for my preparations yesterday and swore to stick to it. I want to ace it, but I’m not really doing what I should be doing to ace it. I need to get up earlier in the morning, stop working so much and start going to the library and get my act together. I haven’t yet figured out how I’m going to get to Moscow, since I don’t have much time I figure I’ll just catch a flight, which is also cheaper [in the complex world we live in today] than taking the train.
Yesterday I went to the office of my favorite airline – Aeroflot *cough, cough* - and bought tickets home and back here. I’m flying out early on Monday the 30th of July, arriving in Stockholm in the afternoon. I hope I’ll get to spend the night at Malin’s new place in the capitol, before heading down to my family in Gothenburg on the 1st of July. We’re going to celebrate our joint July birthdays, and try not to think about how old we are…
On the 13th of July I’m off to the states. My plans for this trip are grand. I’m flying into Los Angeles with my father, where we’ll go visit my friend AnnMarie a couple of days before her wedding [which is July 19th and I’m going to be one of her bridesmaids] and hopefully do some wine-testing for my birthday on the 16th. My father then leaves me and I’ll go to see Betsy in San Francisco. There I’ll have a couple of days channeling Allen Ginsberg and visiting all the books store I can eat and enjoying her intelligent company, before going north to see Aaron in Portland. Maybe he’ll pick me up in San Francisco, maybe I’ll take the bus there. I’m going to stay with him for a whole week – yay! – and we’ll go to Seattle for the weekend. Then I’ll hopefully be flying from Portland so that I can be on time in Los Angeles for my flight back across the ocean on the 30th of July. Not only am I going to see many of my friends and relax and spend time with my father, but I have another reason for being so psyched about this trip, too – I’m going to buy one of them red VAIO Sony laptops with 250 GB for a little more than a 1000$!
Between the 8th and the 16th of August I’ll be taking part in the course for teachers of Swedish as a foreign language abroad at a school on Tjörn, an island located not far from Gothenburg. I recieved a mail about it from the Swedish Institute two months ago, and I applied straight away, because I think it will be an awesome way for me to actually become more like a *real* teacher, but I didn’t think I would actually get an invitation, since it’s for free with only a limited amount of places. A couple of the students from my Swedish group here at Ural State will be attending this school’s summer course for foreign students of Swedish at the same time, which will be even greater. I hope I can talk my mother into letting me have them over for dinner in Gothenburg [they’re very kind, mother, good kids, and they speak Swedish too! You can have det goda samtalet with them all the way, I promise!].
On September 6th I have two finals in Russian grammar. God, I hope I get the time I need to prepare.
On September 10th I’m flying back to Yekaterinburg, back to Russia and everything starts over again – with one tiny little change: I will be in the Master’s Program, I’ll be teaching two more Swedish classes and I won’t have to worry about preparing for any exams at Gothenburg University anymore because I will have graduated!
If I keep my tongue in the right mouth, that is…








