I am from a town … in Ukraine.
Kobeliaky. Which is way different from here. We don’t have skyscrapers. Well, apart from the treetops scraping the sky. In our yards, we have large gardens. Flowers, fruit, and vegetables are sleeping there. Each early morning, the downtown turns into an open-air market. My grandma works there.
My town isn’t hiding anything. It’s not pretending. And, you know, with time, it taught me to be natural, too. This nakedness, eventually, made me grow into my town. Or.. the other way around.
Now, we travel holding hands wherever my feet bring us. My eyes recall my hometown memories when familiar things stumble over me. My body moves as if to the rhythm of the wind from where I grew up. I hear the melody of my town’s rivers in the Chicago rains. I carry the tan on my skin from the hometown sun.
“Wow”, you think. “But what’s so aesthetic and special there to miss?”
Show, don’t tell, - they say. Done. I hope you can make these photo puzzles into a holistic idea of what my town, and Ukraine, in general, is.
houses and apartments
left: barely glancing from behind the chestnut trees, the old-style apartment building, and a grocery shop on the first floor. it’s very common in Europe.
right: a wayside with a typical old design of our houses, and trees are omnipresent at home, as you might have noticed already.
about the sky.
what I truly miss about my town is deep colors of a summer sky. occasionally, it would rain, bringing with itself this somewhat intimidating, but overall aesthetically-pleasing art above our heads.
I bet you get an impression that i am living in a botanic garden. well. me too. You would encounter this flora anywhere in the country. Hope you enjoyed your digital journey, reader. Maybe you have a particular request for the next one?
P.S. Thought this article would be a political weep? We can get to that one day. For now, we are just having a light coffee-chat. Didn’t my last article on Ukrainian modern pop give you a coffee-like energy boost? :)