A quick weekend trip to Rocca Calascio and Santo Stefano di Sessanio, ending with a great sandwich in L’Aquila
Roma is a particular type of capital in that a lot of her just doesn’t work. That’s part of her beauty, I tell myself, while the train to the office is 45 minutes late and seagulls are aiming their poops at my head. It’s part of her charm. Over the years since I moved back here from highly functional California, I’ve realized that my mind has made my city an anthropomorphic one, maybe born of the need to understand her. But probably because she has so much personality. Roma è sempre viva. And she strikes me as very much female. She lives, she breathes, she thunders. She’s stunning in her decay and her refusal to admit to the modern ages, and when I wake up to a light springtime chill but then walk outside to flurries of hail, only to get to the office accompanied by blazing sunshine, I realize we’re all living in the grips of a very hormonal non-human.
But I digress. Or I’m telling another story.
Living in a capital city, and to be fair, any major metropolis, means that sometimes you need to do that thing where you get out of it. It’s loud, and sometimes you don’t need loud. Sometimes you need to see the stars. I see you rolling your eyes, but come on. It’s clichè because it’s true. And here, Italy makes finding silence easy. Just a few hours drive north you hit the Abruzzo region, and although there’s a lovely chunk of it by the water, I spent my weekend traipsing around the mountainous part, looking for silence and finding silence’s best friends, Mr. Oh my god the food here is amazing and Mrs. Why yes, I’d love some more wine. We also spent a fair amount of time with their offspring, little Ms. Why don’t these jeans fit anymore, but that doesn’t matter, because sweatpants are totally appropriate star-gazing attire.
2 comments
It was a great choice for a captivating and delicious trip, congrats!
Grazie!