Skip to main content

Lucky Ticket


In Russia, bus tickets have six numbers on them. If the sum of the first three is equivalent to the sum of the second three, it’s a lucky ticket. And if there is a difference of one between the sums of the first three and second three numbers, that means you’re going to meet someone new. Flawless logic imho. On Wednesday morning, I got my first lucky ticket. I wondered how exactly this luck would manifest itself. To tell you the truth, I don’t know what kind of luck I’d order if I got the choice. A free cinnamon bun would be very welcome. Or instant fluency in Russian. That would be nice too.

Actually, I think this has been the most challenging aspect of my Year Abroad so far – I’ve got a whole year with no academic work and very few commitments, and I don’t know exactly what I want out of it. I mean I want a lot of things. I want to make friends for life in Krasnoyarsk, but do I want to just have fun with them or to try to learn Russian through them too? Or is the best way to learn Russian just to have fun with Russian friends? Should I be focusing on work or friends or studying in my own time? Should I be trying to get out of Krasnoyarsk and explore the rest of Russia while I’m here, or would I regret that kind of extravagance once I’m paying Moscow prices for a flat six months from now? I’m tempted to just go with the flow and take all the opportunities which present themselves to me (which are, after all, quite numerous), but that feels like passive acceptance, which can’t possibly bring me an experience in line with my personal priorities for the year (whatever they are).

It probably seems like I’m over-thinking this massively, but the lack of pressure which this year brings has become a kind of pressure in itself. At university, you are judged (academically, at least) according to a set of clearly defined criteria, and that brings a certain degree of reassurance. You can ignore those criteria if you like, but if you ever need some sort of framework against which to evaluate yourself, you can always fall back on grades. Even if your grades are bad, this gives you a kind of direction. ‘This term, my French audio-visual mark was bad. Next term, I’m going to watch lots of French documentaries. I know that this endeavour will not be in vain because I will see a visual manifestation of its results on my next grade card. I know, in other words, that it’s meaningful and productive, and measurably so.’ In fact, this is all the more useful because it limits my prodigious imagination. I can shut down alternative ideas about what I could be doing with my time, because there’s a higher authority validating the choice of watching lots of French documentaries. I think that what I’m saying (or something like it) has been said before by lots of people. Yevgeny Zamyatin’s dystopian novel We, which was something of a predecessor to George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four, raises the idea that people are often happiest when obedience to a set of rules is both possible and enforced (therefore free will is the cause of unhappiness). I think that Milton’s Paradise Lost makes a similar point: pain, guilt and sin begin only when Adam and Eve realise their freedom to disobey God’s simple statutes.

It’s just occurred to me that I’m implicitly likening university to the Garden of Eden and the big wide world to postlapsarian earth. That probably isn’t a fair comparison. What I’m really trying to say is that having to choose things can be difficult, and such is the case with me choosing what I want to get out of this year. Basically, I’m not sure that lucky bus ticket was such a gift after all. The good news, though, is that I’ve just found out that lucky bus tickets must be eaten in order to be effective. I’m off to cash in all that tasty, tasty luck.

Ragoût de boeuf à la lucky ticket...
Get in my tummy

Comments

  1. Pourtant tu as un cadre bien défini dans le temps et dans l'espace cette année. Une année obligatoire à l'étranger, avec un objectif académique final clairement identifié : l'apprentissage du russe. C'est on ne peut plus borné !
    Cependant le champ des possibles que tu énumères semble soulever la question du sens qu'il t'est offert de donner à cette liberté.
    Pourquoi chercher à te projeter dans un futur hypothétique ? Pourquoi l'utilitaire devrait-il prendre le pas sur le plaisir simple de vivre l'altérité ?
    Banzaï !!! Mort aux vaches ! Carpe Diem et advienne que pourra ! Ni remords ni regrets.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Haha vous donnez de bons conseils! C'est vrai que l'objectif pour mon diplôme c'est d'apprendre le russe, mais je me demande toujours comment y atteindre, et si c'est la meilleure façon d'utiliser mon temps ici. Mais enfin oui, je crois que vous avez raison quand vous disez 'ni remords ni regrets', c'est la bonne approche

      Delete
    2. "je me demande toujours comment l' atteindre" : pas la peine de te prendre la tête, ça va venir tout seul, à ton rythme. Profite de l'incroyable opportunité qui t'est offerte de rencontrer de nouvelles personnes, de vive de nouvelles expériences et continue à nous régaler avec tes articles !

      Delete
  2. C'est d'accord! Je ferai de mon mieux

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

No Animals were Harmed

There's someone I still haven't told you about. One of the most supportive, positive influences in my life right now. In fact, he may well be my best friend in Krasnoyarsk, although sometimes he pisses me right off. He's small, grey, furry, and has four legs. I'm talking, of course, about Syoma the kitten. I didn't need to go straight to work on Friday morning, so I decided to make a celebratory pilaf. As soon as I left my bedroom, Syoma was all over me like a rash. He likes trying to do figures of eight around my legs while I'm walking, and isn't remotely discouraged when this ends up with him being accidentally kicked halfway across the room. I've never lived with a cat before, and I was really struck by just how resilient they are. You could probably do a full-on NBA slam dunk with Syoma, and he'd just pick himself up and start doing figures of eight around your legs again. He's also incredibly stubborn. Like, mad stubborn. Back home...

Torgashinskiy Khrebet

On Friday, I took a bus all the way to the other end of town – a place called Oktyabrskaya. I was meeting some friends here, and then walking to a place called ‘Torgashinskiy Khrebet’. It took an hour and a half. Only here’s the thing – everywhere in Russia is called Oktyabrskaya. It became obvious that I’d got the wrong Oktyabrskaya as soon as I got off the bus and saw that none of the ten people I was meant to be meeting was in fact here. Not one. I opened the transport app on my phone and typed ‘Oktyabrskaya’ again. Then I scrolled past about fifty Oktyabrskaya cafes, hotels, bridges, and districts, before finally finding ‘Oktyabrskaya bus stop’. But, to my dismay, I now saw that there was not just one ‘Oktyabrskaya bus stop’, but three. Three ‘Oktyabrskaya bus stops’. Which town planner could possibly have decided that it would be a good idea to build three bus stops with the exact same name – a name, by the way, which is also used for bus stops in every other Russian city as fa...