Searching for… Binti

 “For the first time I couldn’t just curse out someone who had cut me in line at the Post Office! Well, I could but they wouldn’t understand it … and that was very frustrating,” 

Wanjiku Margaret Wainaina

Introduction: The Kenyan Snowflake

The Kenyan snowflake

Most people think of snow as something fluffy, white, soft to the touch and easy on the palate with its watery, insipid taste. But if you take a closer look at a snowflake, put it under a microscope, you will see that it is actually full of hard edges. Pointy bits and crystal-like shards.

In so many ways, that is Binti.  At first you get to know this tiny woman, whose small figure is contrasting with the baggy, unmatched clothes and dreadlocks, but who is very much warm at first with her British-like politeness.

But that is not the real Binti.

She is all about her hard edges. She is unapologetic, has a temper molded by the warm Nairobi environment and is so private, that it is hard to know when she is keeping something from you, or telling you a lie (for a laugh, of course… or maybe not). Try getting a personal detail out of her and you will most likely give up before she even bends an inch.

The last time I saw Binti, we were traveling with a group of friends to Genova, and I was capturing with my camera those last moments of those people I so enjoyed being around. I, in my own manner, refused to erase same pictures of Binti, and after a violent outburst from her, we didn’t speak for the rest of the day. We didn’t even say goodbye. I was inside of a bar ordering a coffee, when she came in and dropped a casual “ciao”. I asked for a proper farewell, to which she replied “I don’t do goodbyes…” and left.

That is Margaret Wainaina ( a name she refuses to believe I found out about). Hard to the core. And with a “vegetarian” diet that makes absolutely no sense (eggs: great; mayonnaise: eww, that is disgusting; what sort of reasoning is that?)

But snow melts near warmth. So does Binti. Give her a glass of cheap and sweet Lambrusco, some chips with ketchup and some friendly company and she melts. She relaxes and parties like no other. And just like snowflakes, she hits the ground in the end, and I don’t mean it as a metaphor. The more relaxed she is (or should I say drunk), the more prone she is to roll on the pavement. She is indeed a roller. And apparently, not proud of it. But that is Wanjiku at her best.

Aside from our year and a half studying and drinking together, I had the pleasure of working with her for 5 months and an even bigger pleasure of torturing her with my daily rants about nothing in particular. I’m pretty sure she hated me for that whole period. But it was easy to buy back her friendship with cheap chocolate chip biscuits.

Kenyan Snowflake was one of the many pejorative nicknames I created to piss her off. But I never noticed how pertinent it was.

Because, you see, that is the thing about snow. Sure, it’s cold and causes a hell lot of trouble. But a snowy day it’s quite a magical thing… And it’s so hard to get snow in Kenya, that when you do, you gotta enjoy it.

The Interview

1)      I’d like to know how did you end up in Milan? How was this choice made?

I read a newspaper that I had never bothered to read before and found the Cattolica advert. I have never read that newspaper again!

2)      Being honest, would you say that if you were in your comfort zone, back in your country with your own friends and life, would you have the patience, or even the will to be friends with some of the people in this crazy bunch?

Not in a million years. The gang was a strange mix of people who spent most of their time together drunk. Before Milan, I was a very sober person. In fact, some could have called me a role model. Until of course I discovered rolling! I am not very proud of myself these days and you all played a big role in my downfall!

3)      What is the most surprising thing you learned about the world, and people, by living and sharing all this time with these “strangers”?

You know the people your parents told you about when they wanted to teach you a lesson about life? You know, like the neighbor who is now almost 40, has moved back home, broke and jobless … well, I have learned never to judge such a person. He too has his story to tell.

4)      Did you learn anything about yourself through this crazy interchange with people?

Absolutely! That I really should not drink!

5)      What is your fondest memory of the time you spent together? Say as many as you want.

Oh gosh, where to start? The tiny apartment at Paolo Sarpi, the fancy one at the Hobbits (because it had TV and airconditioning!), that match box apartment at via Melzo, la Vineria, all the trips we took together … just hanging out with the gang kept me sane. I think the highlight of them all was the strange events of April 29th 2014 when a hug between 2 friends resulted in one of them landing in the ER!!!

6)      What about Milan as a city? What’s your opinion on this big village?

I discovered about a month before my stay was over that I really could walk everywhere!

7)      What is your favorite thing to do here?

Taking the metro everywhere … LOL!

8)      What annoys you the most about this metropolis?

The friggin’ dogs man, everywhere!!!

9)      I think Italy is a take it or leave it style of country. You are either in love with it or not. What is your take on it? Anything goes.

Once I figured out to order caffe Americano and patatine pronto gusto, I was in love!

10)   What will you miss the most when you leave ? It can be about the city, the people or the country. Just say what is the thing that makes your heart beat faster and wish you could do again.

Why does the rest of the world bother wasting so much space putting seats in a pub when all you need is a counter and the good old paved street!?! Jumping on an RV train and in a few hours, I’d be in a completely different city or country. I loooved the trains!

11)   Do you have any regrets about this whole experience?

Backwards never, forwards ever … that’s the scout’s motto!

12)   We talk a lot about leaving and what is next for each one of us. What is next for you?

Well, I’m really fighting finding myself on my mother’s couch. I don’t think people really appreciate what a rock bottom that really is. So I’m taking anything on just to avoid that!

13)   Are you excited or sad to leave?

Both!

14)   What are your ambitions for the future?

Ambition??? That’s for cowards! As the wind blows, so does my heart!

15)   Would you say that this experience changed your course of life or it just set it straighter?

I’d say that it brought it together.

16)   What was the hardest part of the experience? Did you have to overcome obstacles to make through to the end (financial, cultural, adaptation problems, geographical distance)?

Language was a big one for me. For the first time I couldn’t just curse out someone who had cut me in line at the Post Office! Well, I could but they wouldn’t understand it … and that was very frustrating, But then I met Silvia and I learnt how to say ***di merda!

17)   Looking back, do you think that these obstacles added or subtracted from the whole thing?

It brought it all together!

18)   Will you miss going through the motion of the whole experience?

Just sitting in traffic in Nairobi is enough to make me miss even the friggin’ dogs of Milan!

19)   What are the lessons you take from this whole thing?

It could be worse, I could be one of those friggin’dog-talking, dog owners picking up dog poop!

20)   Any advice to people going through the same?

Going through what? Dog talking or dog poop collecting?

21)   You know, the blog is called Searching for Kim, because I am always searching for myself (in others, in places, in experiences, in me). What do you search for?

That famous G-spot! If you find, it let me know!

22)   Did you find anything in me that helped you on your own search?

Well Kimi, definitely NOT the G-spot! (eeeewww!!!)

23)   The way people see you tells a lot about you as a person and learning how you are perceived can help adjust and evolve. Care to help by portraying me (I got to find me at a certain point, maybe you could help, criticism is widely accepted, really)?

That question alone points to much deeper developmental issues Kim. A self-obsessed, Portuguese-Brazilian (occasionally deluded to thinking he’s African) king of cheap, I mean deals! You are proof that no matter how much one travels, or how educated one is, your biases are never too far! I told you before, you are the dream customer of all the social media marketers! Even though you are a giant, you are emotionally sensitive and need constant hugs and food … Also, you might need a verbal sensor … or not, I guess that’s what makes you special! I admire how you live your life sooo openly online, like literally that name is everywhere … I should try be a little more like you, look at where my BIG secret got me! 😀

24)   Are you any different now than what you were before this all happened?

Of course, I’ve learnt to survive on chips and ketchup … wait I did that before!

25)   Is your search done?

Is it ever???

26)   Final thoughts?

The gang kept me sane. It also kept me drunk and I miss all of you!

 

This post is part of the Searching For... Interview Project.

Searching for… Niko

 “Because little by little, the people around you will eventually bring you down to their level of existence.” 

Nikolay Shatarov

Introduction: A Gyspsy With High Standards

A Gypsy with High Standards

A Gypsy with High Standards

Niko is a gypsy. Before you call me racist, understand that he really is a gypsy. Not because he is Bulgarian. It’s just that he is a gypsy. He is a traveler, a nomad. He’s been everywhere and has done it all. You could say he goes where the wind blows, packing a really light bag and very low expectations, even though this is a guy with really high standards.

Niko doesn’t eat chips if the bag is not transparent. He doesn’t eat M&M’s of certain colors, like blue. He won’t set foot inside a fast food chain restaurant and he really likes his poppy seed cakes, although he only eats once a day and this meal normally consists of quality chips and beer. He really likes good beer and won’t settle for a 20cl glass. It’s either 50cl or no beer. And he doesn’t use public transportation for he rather walk one hour than to smell people’s armpits.

He also speaks his mind. Words flow unfiltered from his mouth, without worries of being labeled unkind, prejudiced or narrow-minded. He lives in a world of its own. His opinion is his opinion and it should suffice. I normally say that if there is an exception, Niko is the one… for everything. Sometimes I say it jokingly and sometimes I don’t. We even created a Tumblr with all the things Niko used to say (visit http://nikosaxioms.tumblr.com/).

Hey guys. as you may know, I am gonna celebrate my 31st with you in Rome, whether I like it or not! And just to make sure that I am not gonna be given a box of juice as a present, or even worse, an analog plastic camera, I would like to register. So, there is this little shop on via Torino 61, called ‘Area 61’, and there is this amazing straw hat there, which looks particularly good on me (at least that’s what the gay shop assistant told me). So I am dropping a hint here, that would be a great present for me!P.S. I have a small head, so the smallest size would be preferable.” 

Open letter from Niko to his friends regarding his birthday gift

But Niko is a friend like no other. A true friend, the kind that before telling you things like they are, listens to you. His advise is never good, because he is the exception and he might get sidetracked by a small detail in your story. But his advise is honest.

We couldn’t be more opposites. He is european and looks latin, I’m latin and look european. We would never go for the same girl. On hostels he likes the top bunker and I prefer to be closer to the floor. He likes white wine, I like red. I eat 10 times a day, he only eats one. I download movies that are 700 mb because I want it fast, he downloads high quality 25 gb files to watch on his HD screen. He hates smartphones and taking pictures, I couldn’t live without sharing on Instagram. When we shared a house for a month we never had conflicting schedules. I showered in the morning, he used the bathroom at night. He is always on time, I’m always at least 10 minutes late.

But we are also alike. We like beer, to the point we once traveled to Brussels just to spend one day drinking away at the Delirium Café. We don’t know the meaning of social drinking and we are always the last people to leave a party. And we like people and traveling and we both get really annoyed by Italian culture sometimes. We both feel old and incredibly young at the same time and we hate slow people. And we love to criticize.

I learned very few things with him, because we either spent most of the time disagreeing or just drinking.

Wait… So maybe this is what I learned from him. Having your own opinions, standing up for them and  feeling entitled to be right is ok. You don’t have to please everyone. People will like you, regardless, if theY find in your opposition a common ground.

But this is not goodbye. We are both gypsies and our paths will cross many more times. And one thing is certain: there will be alcohol and we will be judging people around.

The Interview

1)      I’d like to know how did you end up in Milan? How was this choice made?

I saw an ad in Facebook, I clicked on it, it was about a meeting in Sofia with a representative of Cattolica University. It was in a bad neighborhood I would never go to, but I still called them, they agreed to meet me in the city center, the recruiter was really nice, she encouraged me to send my resume, and 6 weeks later I got accepted.

2)      Being honest, would you say that if you were in your comfort zone, back in your country with your own friends and life, would you have the patience, or even the will to be friends with some of the people in this crazy bunch?

Absolutely. I realize I don’t have much control over my life, but the one thing I can decide on is how I spend my time with. The reason I chose to spend pretty much all of my free time with my friends in Milan was the same as the reasons I chose my other friends all over the world. You can’t choose your family or colleagues. At least choose the kind of friends that make you feel comfortable to be yourself around!

3)      What is the most surprising thing you learned about the world, and people, by living and sharing all this time with these “strangers”?

They were no strangers, although most of them are pretty strange. And they just proved my belief that friends are one of the most important treasures in the world. But other people showed me they the world is full of incompetent, stupid and ignorant people that I wish were never born.

4)      Did you learn anything about yourself through this crazy interchange with people?

Yes, I learned that with age I have developed zero tolerance to stupidity.

5)      What is your fondest memory of the time you spent together? Say as many as you want.

  1. My birthday in Rome.
  2. The numerous dinners in the hobbit hole.
  3. The two extraordinary days in Milano Design Week 2013 and 2014.
  4. All the trips I took with my sweetest friends.
  5. All the nights in La Vineria.
  6. And so much more!

6)      What about Milan as a city? What’s your opinion on this big village?

Milan is a marvelous city. One of the most beautiful cities in Europe. I had the time of my life here.

7)      What is your favorite thing to do here?

Just walk. Walk everywhere, anywhere. I pity the fool who uses public transport in the city with the most beautiful streets.

8)      What annoys you the most about this metropolis?

The Italians. All the Pepes. Milan and Italy would be an amazing place if it wasn’t for the Italians. Just as Bulgaria would be an amazing country without the Bulgarians. Or Spain without the Spaniards. Or France without the French. I don’t discriminate. I criticize all people in the same manner.

9)      I think Italy is a take it or leave it style of country. You are either in love with it or not. What is your take on it? Anything goes.

Leave it.

10)   What will you miss the most when you leave ? It can be about the city, the people or the country. Just say what is the thing that makes your heart beat faster and wish you could do again.

My friends here. The food and wine wouldn’t taste that good if I hadn’t shared it with them. They know who they are. The same people that made me laugh every day and the people that I hope will become an essential part of my life. Forever.

11)   Do you have any regrets about this whole experience?

I regret not being able to fall in love with someone in Milan.

12)   We talk a lot about leaving and what is next for each one of us. What is next for you?

At the age of 32 I am about to move back to my parent’s house. So to everybody out there – nightmares do come true!

13)   Are you excited or sad to leave?

Sad to leave the people behind, excited to see what comes next.

14)   What are your ambitions for the future?

“My ambition is handicapped by my laziness.”

15)   Would you say that this experience changed your course of life or it just set it straighter?

Of course it changed it. The butterfly effect! Even your choice of breakfast can change your life forever!

16)   What was the hardest part of the experience? Did you have to overcome obstacles to make through to the end (financial, cultural, adaptation problems, geographical distance)?

I still can’t understand why in Italy when you agree to meet at 8 everyone arrives at 8.30. And I can’t accept the fact that I have worked for more than 5 months in this country and when I ask if I am ever to be paid, people keep replying “It’s Italy, you have to accept the fact that things happen slowly here!”

17)   Looking back, do you think that these obstacles added or subtracted from the whole thing?

They subtracted from the whole experience for sure, you know what they say: “What doesn’t kill you…fucks you up completely!”

18)   Will you miss going through the motion of the whole experience?

NO!

19)   What are the lessons you take from this whole thing?

Be very careful when you chose the county, the city, and even the neighborhood that you live in. Because little by little, the people around you will eventually bring you down to their level of existence.

20)   Any advice to people going through the same?

Read the above.

21)   You know, the blog is called Searching for Kim, because I am always searching for myself (in others, in places, in experiences, in me). What do you search for?

True people, good food, mild climate, entertainment, laughs, seeing a movie with my friends, sharing a donut.

22)   Did you find anything in me that helped you on your own search?

No, but I still love you regardless.

23)   The way people see you tells a lot about you as a person and learning how you are perceived can help adjust and evolve. Care to help by portraying me (I got to find me at a certain point, maybe you could help, criticism is widely accepted, really)?

My dear dear friend, you could be very obnoxious, condescending, you never accept criticism, you are almost never right, and you are an attention whore. Yet, I never found you boring, you always made me laugh, and I treasure the times we got to talk, just talk. To sum it up, I can’t say that I like you, but yet love you. You are the kind of person that I can’t say why I love, it’s just beyond me!

24)   Are you any different now than what you were before this all happened?

No, I just added a few thing in the list of things that I don’t want to experience again. And some things in the list of the best experiences of my life. Ever. It has been an amazing year, and I wouldn’t change it for the world.

25)   Is your search done?

No, not even close.

26)   Final thoughts?

To all my friends in Italy – don’t just tolerate bad behavior. If someone smells bad in the bus – react! If someone late – react! If someone jumps the queue – react! If someone is way too loud in the plane – react! (No more alcoholic water) If you think that a person made your day – tell them! You all made my 18 month here so much better. I am sorry for not telling you that more often. Thank you for that. Your all rock! And some of you roll!

 

This post is part of the Searching For... Interview Project.

Searching for… The Interview project

I named this blog Searching for Kim because I do believe that the search for myself is endless. It will take a whole lifetime to figure out who I am and why I am the way I am. I will change habits, stick to some, acquire some new ones… It’s just the way life works.

And one thing that I realize is that I am not alone in my search. People come and go in my life and they leave behind pieces of them: stories, memories (good and bad), affection, bonds, money, forgotten sweaters, shared meals, drunken nights and the inevitable “saudade“, a universal feeling that only Portuguese language can translate into words.

And these people that come and go are also on a search of their own.

Each one of us has its own path, its own search. We search for ourselves through people, feelings, experiences and places. We do our best to conduct the search ourselves, but sometimes destiny comes and messes everything up.

I’ve always been very curious about how destiny works. How it puts people together, people that would otherwise never meet, due to physical distance, cultural background or even philosophies.

And since destiny chose to put me together with these people and they’ve been such a crucial part of my own search I decided to give them a voice here on the blog. Tell their stories not only through my perspective, but also through their own words.

Welcome to the Searching for….  The Interview Project. As they answer their interview, I will post it here, together with a picture I took of them, that I feel symbolizes their personalities and a short introduction written by me.

"O meu passado é tudo quanto não consegui ser. Nem as sensações de momentos idos me são saudosas: o que se sente exige o momento; passado este, há um virar de página e a história continua, mas não o texto." Fernando Pessoa
"My past is all that I couldn't be. Not even the feeling of past moments are missed by me: what is felt requires the moment; when it has passed, there's a turning of the page and the story goes on, but not the text." Fernando Pessoa