Like I said in my last post from two weeks ago(!), the
transition from Portugal to Türkiye was a rough one. I was in Istanbul for three weeks and it rained
almost every day. The temps hovered
around the mid-40’s with just enough drizzle to make sure everything was wet
and miserable.
I’d go to sleep in blackness and wake up in gray. It did a serious number on my state of mind. I didn’t want to write, didn’t want to study,
definitely didn’t want to look for a job. Just not the best trip to the city, though it
did confirm for me that I will choose Portugal over Türkiye for a new home.
But I’m getting ahead of myself. I extended my stay in the Taksim apartment
for another week since it was a decent place.
The host did make things a bit more … interesting by asking for a cash
payment instead of going through the Airbnb app. A cash payment in euros. But, we’re in Türkiye. How’s that supposed to work?
All over Istanbul are rows of ATMS. They usually appear in clusters of 3-5 all
from different banks in the city. They
can be tricky, though. Some do give out
denominations other that Turkish lira, but they don’t always have signs to indicate
this. Some have limits to how much they
lend, usually 4000 lira at the most. That’s
about 138 USD.
The host asked for 315 euros which meant I had to hit a
couple of ATMs and then find one of the many conversion offices on Istiklal
Street. Needless to say, it was more of
an adventure than I was planning on. Despite that issue, I paid the fee and
enjoyed the rest of my time in the place.
I booked the next place for a week in the Fatih region. I called for an Uber only to realize that in
the city, the taxis are the Ubers. I ended
up in a non-Uber taxi thinking it was the one I called, then had to cancel the
other one. Since the new guy had no idea
where we were going, I had to lend him my phone with the directions. I still don’t get that. Everyone and their mom has a phone. I shouldn’t have to provide mine for directions
in your city.
The new neighborhood is called Sehremini, a nicer looking place
than the last. Although, my intro to the
new apartment was not the greatest.
There was a noticeable temperature change when entering the apartment. Could there be actual heat in the place? It was very warm, yet I never saw a heating system (there was a radiator in the kitchen, but it was inactive). It just reminded me that I could never get any of the radiators to work in the last place. I just bundled up and hoped for warmer weather.
The place was eerily quiet. That’s usually a good thing in an Airbnb. But in Türkiye? It was just weird. Where was all the horn-honking and random shouting? The nightly screeching of the neighborhood cats? I could barely even hear the calls to prayer. In Istanbul!
In my last place, the call was so loud in the back of the
apartment, where the bedroom was located, that I would usually wake up just
before 6:30 because I knew it was coming.
I actually like hearing those calls.
It’s part of the charm of the place.
Not to worry, though.
My neighbors made up for the lack of street noise by constantly stomping
on my head and talking loudly at all hours for the first couple of days. Because of the rain, that person was stuck
inside as much as me and I really grew to hate him.
Walking along the streets on that first day, I clearly saw the difference in the neighborhoods. The sidewalks are wide and unbroken, the side streets usually traffic free. And again there is the quiet. While it was nice not to have to constantly watch my step because of the broken tiles, bobbing and weaving to avoid the motorcycles coming up behind me on the sidewalk, I think I prefer the bombed-out warzone of Taksim. There was always something going on outside my window (usually two cars trying to go in opposite directions with a taxi and a delivery truck blocking the way – so many horns!) and the street felt more alive. My only view on the basement level of the new place was the lovely patio area and that’s it.
As my taxi driver so succinctly put it in his broken
English, “Taksim bad. Fatih good.” I see what he means.
As with any place in the city, there was easy access to food,
shopping, and pharmacies right around the corner from the quiet back street of
my apartment. A weekly farmer’s market
set up only a few blocks over.
My last two days in the apartment saw the glorious return of the sun. So bright! So pretty! I went out in the 50-degree weather and just stared at the sky like a woman transfixed. I was able to walk near Sultanahmet for lunch (making sure to steer clear of Zaza’s hunting grounds). I strolled along the sea and for a time, all was good in the world.
It didn’t last, though. As much as I love the city (everything is so cheap!), I’d made the choice days before to get out of that weather. I knew the decision was a good one when departure day arrived and the sky was gray and foreboding again. And my taxi driver was another confused man. I used Uber to get him as well, so he knew we were going to Istanbul airport. He just didn’t know where at the airport. His phone led us past a security check on a deserted back road and, after a mistaken turnaround, to the cargo department of Turkish Air. He pulled over and I just stared. I’m not getting out here. I don’t even know where here is!
He found a guard and asked for directions. And again, I was confused. This is a cab driver in Istanbul. Are you seriously telling me the guy has
never dropped anyone off at the international terminal of the biggest airport in
the city? How is that even possible? Why would the directions on his phone lead to
the cargo terminal? I just don’t
understand.
Laughing it off, he let me off at the terminal. I was just grateful not to have been left in
the middle of nowhere. Then it was onto
not one, not two, but three security checks.
First it was the screening as soon as you enter. Then the main screening which only stood out because
they no longer make you separate your liquids or take out computers. That was a nice touch. Didn’t stop me from losing another corkscrew
and a pair of hair shears. Totally my
fault this time. I hadn’t remembered to
put them in the checked luggage. Sigh.
The third check was a surprise. I had walked the six miles to my gate (the
airport is massive) only to find it closed off by plastic panels. My passport was then checked three times
before I got to a table where the staff searched my bags. Then a chick patted me down and waved a wand
over me. Seriously? We’d all been through normal security. How much more dangerous could we have gotten
in the hour since then?
I sat down to wait, feeling violated and exhausted. Nothing like being treated like criminal when
you’re a paying customer to really take it out of you. And I had a 12-hour flight ahead of me. Yes, it was back to America. It had been almost two months since my last
visit so I figured it was time to pick up my mail and figure out my next move.
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