Erica noted that everyone walks slowly to the point where, if we concentrated on it, the people on Reykjavik’s main shopping street appeared to be moving in slow motion. They are also quiet spoken, but at the same focused and deliberate. Is this because their sense of time is so unlike ours? In Iceland, rather than moving through time, you are suspended in it, and indeed we were told that the Vikings didn’t divide the year into months but gave each day its own name. I loved that it was light all the time, although the landscape seems less dramatic (if that’s possible) in summer because the light is more diffused. When I was in Iceland in the fall, the sun hovered just above the horizon, always in your eyes and casting long shadows from even the smallest rocks. Last week there was an hour or so of twilight around midnight and then, with a change that was more sensation than visually perceptible (something a photograph, for instance, could not capture), it would shift to dawn. In the space of a few minutes I’d go from anticipating more of the evening ahead to feeling as if I’d been up all night and wanting to go to sleep. There was also a different pattern of activity—more people out on Reykjavik’s streets at midnight on Saturday than at any time during the day.
Landscape at Þingvellir, with flowers for scale
Gullfoss: if you look carefully, you can see people standing on the top of the ridge
5 comments:
Thanks for the pics and commentary. Nice.
I went to Iceland once, in May in the early 80s. I liked it, except for the part where everyone smoked during dinner. Let me amend that: not during dinner, not even between courses, but between mouthfuls.
One thing I loved is the Icelandic mindset. Here I was thinking of them as isolated beyond geographic comprehension, while they were thinking of themselves as centrally located, equidistant between the US and Europe.
Smoking...like the French at the time. I always thought the French ate with their left hands so they could smoke with their right. Fortunately, there's no more smoking in restaurants--even in France--and except for the hotel employee who was puffing away under our window, cigarettes were not that evident in Iceland.
Yes, Icelanders are very cosmopolitian, being only 2 1/2 hours from London, for instance. One twenty-something woman told me that when she was in high school (those were the flush times) she and her friends would regularly go to Denmark to shop. And that wherever she goes in Europe, she's never taken for a tourist.
I wanna go I wanna go I wanna go.
Me too me too! So beautiful and strange! The Icelanders I met in art school were the coolest, most cosmopolitan (and spoke the best English) of anyone. My only Icelandic qualm is why did Bjork marry Matthew Barney? But I wouldn't hold that against the entire country.
Thanks for this, Oriane; it gave me a good chuckle. I guess I have to take off my rose-colored glasses and admit that not ALL Icelanders have the good sense I attribute to them.
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