This may sound like Lifetime-esque travel film but was actually the length of my whirlwind trip to two new cities (and countries): Brussels, Belgium and Amsterdam, the Netherlands. The main focus was on Amsterdam, I really only chose Brussels as a side trip to break up the long bus ride.
My friends Imani, Cali, and Victoria were my travel companions on this adventure.
The journey began November 1st, bright and early at 6:30am. I took the first metro from my neighborhood at 5am to get to the bus on time. I am definitely not a bus person but I was pleasantly surprised at how spacious and nice it was (go iDBus!)
We arrived in Brussels around 11:30am and headed off to find our hotel.
We stayed at the appropriately named Hotel Manhattan (all four of us live in NYC when not spending semester(s) in Paris). Our reservation for four granted us two rooms for only 25 euros per person (not bad!)
Armed with a paper map from the hotel, we set off to explore the city.
After a day of exploring, we headed back to our hotel.
We took a two hour nap, then were up at 2:30am to catch our bus to Amsterdam.
We set out to find our bus which was a little…miserable. It was raining, we got very lost with our pathetic paper map, and found the people we encountered to be of little help. We even stopped at a nice hotel and the person in the lobby only said “This is not a public place” and refused to help us. Luckily, we found our bus just in time and we passed out on the two hour bus ride to Amsterdam!
Day 2:
Exhausted after our first day, we got ample sleep this time to prepare for another packed day.
Overall Impressions:
It was a whirlwind weekend but I got what I wanted, which was a snapshot of each city.
Brussels: Beautiful, old world town sort of feel. There was plenty to marvel at, but not necessarily a lot to do. I think devoting a day to the city was the right amount of time. A lovely experience but not necessarily somewhere I would return.
Amsterdam: What most impressed me about this misty city of bike lanes and water access besides the beauty of these amenities was their liberal perspective on controversial topics like marijuana usage and prostitution. I knew going in that this was the case but seeing the openness to both issues was an eye-opening experience. The acceptance and subsequent success of both forms of commerce really made me question whether America and even France’s position on each is optimal. Business aside, the outright condoning of each somehow made both activities seem safer. Regardless of political opinions on either matter, it was certainly a trip that made me think, and I wish I had longer to meet Amsterdam residents and discover their thoughts on these hot button issues.
Overall, I’d mark my first trip outside France a success and look forward to more adventures.
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