Lily McGartland
April 19, 2013
The
Poet Sandal-Maker
Today
when I woke up, I looked across my bedroom and remembered my friend, Carly, was
sleeping in the bed next to mine. She arrived from the States yesterday
afternoon and was very jet lagged; I let her sleep for twelve hours and didn’t
wake her up when I went to class either. When I returned from class in the late
afternoon, the bright sunlight had turned into dark clouds and it began to
rain. I let her sleep for another hour because the rain made our plans of going
on a walk across town not sound so exciting. When we finally made it out of the
house and on our way to the neighborhood of Plaka, for souvenir shopping, the
sun was out again and the streets were slick with rainwater.
We
walked to my favorite breakfast place, Crepa-Crepa, a fast food crepe
restaurant. They have any flavor combination anyone could ever want. On my
recommendation, Carly, and I, got nutella and strawberries. It was delicious as
always. The nutella melted and was thick and creamy. The strawberries were
fresh, crunchy, and sweet, but after the hot chocolate enveloped them, they
became warm and soft.
We
headed down towards Syntagma Square; the nutella dripped down our fingers and
onto the pavement. People stared. We meandered down the main shopping and
pedestrian street, called Ermou, and browsed all of the store’s windows and
displays. We shopped a bit, but we had our goal on a certain Greek sandal maker
down in Monastiraki on our minds. As we walked farther down Ermou, the anticipation
of our prospective sandals was killing us – we couldn’t wait!
As
we walked down Ermou we passed Monastiraki Square, and I knew we were close.
The street the shop is located on connects to Ermou at a slight right angle;
the store was right there, only about twenty feet in front of us. The sign was
up, and there were people spilling out the door. When we got close enough to
see inside we realized that the shop was also full of people; every chair was
taken. We waited right in the doorway for a few minutes until a group of people
had finished, paid, and left; we took their now-empty seats. The majority of
the people in the shop were American tourists, we later found out they were
teachers. The other group was a family with the cutest daughter. She had little
pigtails and was wearing pink pants with pictures of teeth and toothpaste on
them. The owner of the shop, the man who started the business’s son, had a
small white dog that was extremely energetic and friendly. Carly says he was
spazzy and vicious. His name was Poi-Poi (that’s how he told us to say it).
The
shop’s interior was like nothing we had ever seen before. There were pieces of
art on the walls and piles of sandals on every surface. Hundreds of pairs of
shoes hung in groups from the ceiling. The floor was covered in bits of
leather. The “sandal man’s” worktable was covered in nails, glue, and leather
pieces. It was so busy and full of life, even though it was cramped.
When we sat down the assistant, a young man, came over
and gave us a pamphlet with all the sandal styles on it, so we could choose the
ones we liked. Carly chose the “Cleopatra”, a traditional gladiator style, with
many straps. I chose the “Gallico”, a simple
sandal with one strap across the
toes that splits into three sections.
After
we had decided which style we both wanted the assistant came over and helped us
to choose the correct size - this was hard because Carly and I are used to US
sizing, not European. Then, the owner of the store fit the sandals to our feet;
he had us walk around and try them on to make sure they fit and more
importantly they didn’t hurt. After he had loosened both of ours to comfortable
tightness (the leather will stretch a lot) he glued the pieces in place and
nailed them down. We left the store with our new purchases, photos with the
owner, and dog slobbered hands. It was a successful trip. We ambled back up
Ermou and headed past the Parliament building and towards home. Our feet were
very sore and our minds were exhausted; but our mission of getting Greek
sandals was accomplished.
When
we finally made it up stairs to the apartment, we decided to go out to my
favorite Italian restaurant, called La Pasteria. It was delicious and warm, as
always. This time our waiter was not Greek; he was a Greek-American from
Chicago. It was wonderful to hear his accent and be able to talk in full and
complete sentences with him. When we were full and about to burst we walked the
two blocks home and fell straight into bed. Good night!
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