Across the Sea and Nearly Home

It is hard to believe this is only day five since we flew into France on a 6am flight from Edinburgh. What a whirlwind this has been, and how full our memory banks are feeling already. Albeit, our actual bank account has not fared quite so well.

But, oh well… c’est la vie.

We have landed in the quiet seaside village of Talmont-Saint-Hilaire and are unwinding in a cosy apartment with our own kitchen and the sight and sound of waves crashing beyond our window.

Looking out over the Atlantic Ocean, we are now in countdown mode for a good friend’s 60th birthday, only a few days away. We are very excited to see more good friends and come together to share stories about the various adventures abroad that have brought us all to this final part of our travels.

It will be a huge celebration and grand finale for many of us. Our birthday girl herself has just returned from a very impressive 20-day, 400-kilometre pilgrimage from Tuscany to Rome, so her night of celebration will be riding on a particular high.

And so here I find myself with a spare afternoon beside another window in another country, realising we have reached our final country and the pièce de résistance of the whole adventure.

But one thing we have learnt over the past few years, since Les’s cancer diagnosis — thankfully now in remission, though we are forever aware of the realities of that verdict — along with the loss of parents, and the devastating news of the same cursed disease spreading to some of our very closest and dearest friends, is that we are more intent than ever to live, feel and experience whatever we can, whenever we can.

And here I go, meandering off course once again.

Please stay with me. I do have a point to all of this, which will hopefully make more sense to you, the reader, and to me as well, as the words land on the page and explode out of my head and heart.

So, looking back out of my French seaside window, as I take time to breathe in the sound of birds chirping and waves crashing — oh, and the washing machine working hard to return our dwindling underwear supply…..it feels like now or never, once again, to get my thoughts down about where we have been since the last sign-off from the Krakow window.

And for the record, I really didn’t want to leave Krakow.

Out of all the places we have been, I wanted more of that city than any other. We were both unwell on that leg of the trip, and our bed didn’t want us in it.  We could tell by the way either one of us would roll out if the other moved an inch. So we were tired, but that didn’t stop the feeling that I wanted so much more of the city than the five days we had.

It is one city — and one country — I feel sure I will return to. Not many places leave that calling card in a person’s heart when they leave. I have a few now, and many that I have loved but not yearned to return to. I already had Italy, Ireland and Scotland , hence why we were on our way there for a second trip — but Poland has now also left its echo in my heart, and I am already placating my grief at leaving with reassurances that I will be back.

So, off we headed from Krakow and on to Prague.

Everyone I know who has been to Prague said, “Oh Prague. Oh yes, you will love it!”

And we did . Beautiful Prague. With the Charles Bridge, the Old Town Square, museums, music, trees and history. It had it all. But so close on the heels of Krakow, Gdańsk and Warsaw, I couldn’t shake the emotional bias that had anchored me back in the country of my father’s birth. Prague was lovely, but to me, not as beautiful as Krakow.

Les tended to agree with me. But like any good husband travelling while already tired, lugging around five times more luggage than he actually packed or needed for himself, and managing an overly emotional wife, I suspect he knew that agreeing with me was in his best interest.

I will say that we had a very luxurious apartment in Prague, and that bed was definitely happy to have us in it. We also found a fabulous riverside taphouse , we discovered it like a secret treasure which magically appeared one day through an old tunnel glistening in sunshine and it served up cocktails, fantastic beer and decadent pizzas, with 80s rock and roll hits played by live musicians all afternoon, every day. That part was fun and made us smile a lot.

We also managed to attend a symphony orchestra concert with an opera singer in the Chapel of Mirrors in the Old Town, also a stone’s throw from our luxurious apartment, and that gave us a high as well. The history is as rich as anywhere else, and we were so glad to have visited, but we don’t think we will be back — or at least, our hearts are not longing to return.

But never say never.

So, with our excessive luggage growing by the kilo every other day, along with our waistlines, and our now customary hour or more spent strategically trying to redistribute weight and calculate restrictions for the next budget airline we were on, we waved goodbye to the great city of Prague and headed to Glasgow.

It was our second trip to Scotland, but last time we hadn’t seen Glasgow, so we thought it might be a good starting point for our Central and Highland Scotland adventure. And it was a good starting point, but not nearly enough to form an opinion. So while we liked it, it didn’t get under our skin like Edinburgh did last trip. Returning is a soft maybe.

We then headed off towards Inverness under days of continual glorious sunshine, which gradually gave way to wind, mist and the type of Scottish rain that seemed fitting, in some strange way, for the day we chose to visit Culloden.

Like Auschwitz, the emotions and words in that sad place settled in our hearts with a dull ache and a silence that did not feel quite right for this blog. Too deep and sombre and too much a part of what many people already know.

Like many multi-generation Australians of Anglo-Celtic blood, I had several ancestors from clans with names directly linked to my own family tree who fell at Culloden. But that is another blog, or perhaps a private family update, for another day.

Those who fell at Culloden – just a few were named

What did get under our skin — deep into both our hearts — was the Highlands.

This part of the trip was meaningful for both of us. Les had mapped the whole sector out himself, spending hours researching routes, distances and interesting places to stay. He did it for both of us, in part because we both have genetic threads leading us back here: mine through my maternal line, and his through his paternal line, both confirmed through Ancestry DNA. Pretty well 50% for Les in the mid to lower part of Scotland, to match his other Maltese 50%, and for me 30% Highlands and 20% Northern Ireland.

But I also know that, in large part, he planned this Highland journey just for me.

When we first moved to Tasmania four years ago to start our lives afresh, Les was still coming through the long battle of chemotherapy after his shock stage 4 cancer diagnosis. Like many cancer survivors, hardship survivors and battlers of all kinds, one tends to see life and time and priorities through a different lens afterwards.

We certainly did. And still do.

I think in many ways we can say thanks to cancer, fear and hardship for stoking that flame in us, and giving us a bigger, bolder and brighter view of the horizon ahead. We count our blessings that Les came through his, and our hearts break for those not so lucky, but while revelling in gratitude, Les has taken to our small farm under the southern skies like a duck to water. He has also helped ignite my long-stifled desire to write into a bigger reality than ever before.

I love him so much for all of that, and for the effort he put into this part of the trip.

And the trip did exactly what it was intended to do.

On our last trip, we had come by car ferry to Turnberry. We even had a cocktail at Trump’s golf course, which I admit now with some reluctance. On that journey, we stayed mostly on that side of Scotland. To be honest, we had an experience on the Isle of Lismore, meeting the head of the Livingstone clan and being plied with gin and tonics at 9am by the Baron of Bachuil, that probably deserves a blog of its own.

But for this blog, let it sit on the record that I was inspired to return and dig more deeply into my maternal Scottish ancestry very much as a result of that experience.

And now for context.

I started writing a novel two years ago, just for fun and to practise while participating in a Write Your Novel course. A requirement was to have at least, or be close to, 20,000 words of a novel before you could start.

My biggest novel ambition was, and is, the historical semi-fictional story of my Polish grandmother and great–grandmother and their stories of resilience and survival. It will be a huge project, and one I have felt too humbled, and perhaps not deserving enough, even to write about. They are biologically my heroines, but I didn’t grow up with them. I have struggled with my sense of not being worthy or skilled enough, and still struggle.

So my plan arrived out of the forced 20,000 words I had to write. I wanted to write a made-up historical fiction story about two other women, as a type of practice run. I could let my imagination run wild and not get weighed down by feelings of inadequacy representing a true story I do not feel wholly entitled to tell.

So, on a whim, Scotland and my mother’s own ancestors came to me.

I don’t know if they are her ancestors, of course, because their names, their lives and their hardships all just popped into my head as I found them on the page. And when they arrived, they arrived with such force that I was quite amazed by how deeply visual their landscape, voices, stories, families and names became as they came rushing into my head.  I felt their pain and their grief.  I felt cold when they were cold and I felt loved and light when they were happy.  This is how I want to feel when I eventually write within the new confounds of fiction versus reality for my actual grandmother and great grandmother.  But with these two strong willed Scottish women I had no such internal barrier.  They were and are as real to me as I could have ever hoped

I’m not overly superstitious, but… quite honestly, I have since discovered names and places in my actual family tree that run in direct parallel to the characters born in my head without any prior knowledge.

I have to wonder.

And there was an old abandoned church that showed itself to me as I wrote. It arrived on the very first page. I could see it as clearly as if I had been there a thousand times. This old church, with its ruins by the sea, became an anchor for my story, and eventually I thought I should Google it and check whether any such place existed. If it did, even if it was only slightly similar to mine, maybe I could let my curious mind — that occasionally likes to consider itself a tad clairvoyant, laugh if you must — believe there may be something in it. I have always felt a little witchy like this.

And it turns out there is.

Not just vaguely similar, enough to put some fluff and cement around my story, but a place that is 100% the same place, in the same part of Scotland. I know because last week Les and I went there.

It is an old chapel, with the same old and newer headstones scattered outside. It is, like my story, originally built in the 13th century, though my story takes place a few hundred years later.

So, while we had many big, emotional and deeply moving experiences in the stunning landscape of Scotland, the day we parked the car and made the long walk across bridges and over hills to the edge of the cliff that looked over the North Sea, we stood there, just the two of us.

Not another soul anywhere — well, not a living human one anyway.

The place was thick with energy, some dark and some light, and for me it was beguiling and deeply magnetic. This place wasn’t obvious online, so I hadn’t conjured it from pictures. It is rather an obscure location, but I had conjured it from somewhere, somehow, because without any doubt, this was the place that had anchored my story. Embedded in the dormant 20,000 words that have been sitting silent and neglected, like this church, for the last two years.

We stayed for over an hour, and Les, in his gentle, wise way, slipped away and let me immerse myself. Their story came flooding back into my head.

In fact, on the drive back from the church, and through all the days that followed, the story was so big and revealing that I could feel tension in my bones, in my belly. I was barely able to concentrate on the sightseeing that followed.

Mission accomplished.

Book one is worming around in my head, and my characters are screaming at me to get their tales down on paper.

But in the meantime, because we still have a few dollars left in our dwindled bank account to throw around on cocktails and oysters and baguettes — and chocolate croissants, ofcourse — we finished our Scotland trip on a high. We promised ourselves we will return, but only after I have finished writing my book.

Either way, Scotland is under our skin and deep in our hearts. The rain, the cold, the sunshine, the stodgy food and excellent whisky. All of it. Just like Poland, we know that Scottish soil will fall beneath our feet another time.

We had a hilarious Irish host at an equally hilarious pub stay in Thurso, who did his best to impersonate Mrs Brown.

On our third-last day, already booked to fly to France from Edinburgh, he told us that leaving without doing a lap of the upper west coast of Scotland would be like leaving without seeing the jewel in the crown of the whole country.

As an Irishman who comes from another stunning landscape, we took his advice on board. But with no time left, and in actual fact, quite a few jewels already in our hearts, we felt we had earned at least a glimpse of the Scotland crown. We will go back and see if his advice stacks up. His hotel sure didn’t, but that was part of the whole Scottish adventure.

And now we are in France.with more to see and two weeks to go.

We have been here before, but not to this district. As ever, France is sexy, mildly arrogant, subtly beautiful and delicious in every way.

The food, the landscapes and this new region have been a beautiful final layer of fresh experiences in a fabulous and multi-layered trip.

And with more than a week to go, a party to enjoy, and only twelve dresses and four pairs of shoes to choose from, we remain focused on what is still to come and grateful for all that has been offered — heart, soul and body.

But Tassie is waiting for us, and so is our golden retriever Stella, whom we have missed more than anything else.

Sorry kids, we love you all, but Stella……..we are nearly home.

Reflections in a Polish Window

As I sit in an old apartment on the edge of Old Town Kraków, by a window looking out towards the distant southern mountains, the sweet buzz of the old city drifts inside towards me and I am filled with a sense of melancholy. It’s a feeling that runs deeper than the Polish blood in my veins.

It is a rainy Monday afternoon, and I am filled with complex emotions I need to navigate carefully, without dumping them too unceremoniously into this blog. I have only one full day left in this immersive and unforgettable country. A country of people who belong, in some way, to part of me.

A sense of the familiar has rested resolutely and with certainty on my shoulders since the day I arrived.

So, with my trusty laptop powered on, I am letting my fingers dance through the thoughts that have whacked me, stroked something deep in me, and beguiled me since the day we arrived.

Poland offers a lot . It is sophisticated, safe, fascinating, and a melting pot of culinary and historical significance and sightseeing. It has it all — museums, rivers, trees, and a treasure trove of restaurants, cafés and bars. Its people are exactly the right mix of friendly, sincere, gentle and efficient.

They are truly my sort of people.

All bias aside.

Nearly everywhere we have been — and we have done a lot in the last fourteen days — there is a lovely honesty that lets you know straight away that if people are friendly and polite, they mean it. They are not looking for a tip or a good review. They are simply good people, and despite what many of them have been through, more commonly the older people, they have a zest for life that is abundant and energising to walk amongst.

Many speak English, which is another big plus, and I too have tried my best to speak Polish — well, maybe a lukewarm best — or really just to communicate a few phrases in Polish. Usually from my cheat sheet. I have figured out over and over again from the puzzled, then mildly humoured expressions, that trying to sprout Polish sayings from memory usually ends up as gobbledygook, possibly sounding more Chinese than Polish.

But still, I think they appreciate the effort.

Or so I have convinced myself.

My sister-in-law said to me recently, just before we left for our trip, “Louise, you must be in a constant state of flux, with your scientific, detail-obsessed brain clashing up against your more dreamy, artistic and creative brain.”

One side wanting to waft down the street like a multi-coloured butterfly, finding hidden meanings and layers of emotional nuance in every flower, while the other side of my brain is counting how many butterflies there are and trying to figure out how long ago they emerged from their cocoons.

And she was so right.

It was the first time anyone had used such a simple phrase to weigh up my tendency for meandering midstream conversation. And of course, given this is one of my new sisters-in-law, partnered up with one of my very intellectually and scientifically gifted brothers, naturally my ego was happy for me to nod, agree, and accept a little bit of that scientific gene acknowledgement as definitely my cross to bear as well.

Although…

I have my doubts.

Anyway, before I go off and meander any further.

For context, I am in Kraków, and tomorrow is our last full day before we fly to Prague for a few days.

Poland has not only exceeded my expectations in every way, from town to town — Warsaw, Gdańsk, Toruń, Wrocław and now Kraków — it has beckoned me to come back. Every town, as I left it, made me a little sad, and I silently reassured myself I would return.

Not just because of the incredible family research and connection perspective, but because this is Europe in all its glory and frankly at this point of time – at its very best.

And girls, the shopping is fabulous, and so are the prices.

Not every restaurant is cabbage, pierogi and sausage, though we have given all three a red-hot go and are still working on full cultural surrender, with the occasional detour into Italian or Asian along the way. The vodka, on the other hand, has found its way into my Polish heart and slid down my Polish throat a little too enthusiastically on a few too many occasions.

I guess I will have to deal with that later.

In the meantime, Poland has surprised us with rows and rows of restaurants offering abundant cuisine from all over the world.

When we first arrived in Warsaw, as per my earlier blog, we were both battling a virus. Coughing and energy deficits. My poor husband Les, who is also immunocompromised, has copped it the worst. So unfortunately, he has had to sit a few day trips out and rest. I have also been average, but not worse than a bad cold.

Both of us have been prone to coughing bouts that had us concerned we might be ejected from somewhere, and some of the glances we have received were clearly from people wishing they had their hands on the eject button.

Since Covid, someone said to me, “Coughing has become the new farting.” But after the ferocity of this night-time coughing we have picked up, quite honestly, we both think we’d be more content to suffer from the latter, if only it meant we could have a good sleep. Farting while asleep , after all – is really only problematic for the person beside you if they happen to be awake.

So yes, we are tired.

As I write this, we have returned from a Polish doctor’s office. She was excellent and easy to see, and we are both now on a plan. So far there are no fevers. It is a matter of rest, hope, and waiting for one solid immune system and one rather dodgy one between the two of us to sort ourselves out and get well enough for the rest of the trip.

So, holed up in our rather delightful old-world apartment at the edge of the Old Town of Kraków this afternoon, with the sound of a very old barking seal — probably a chain-smoking one — emerging every two minutes from the bedroom, the laptop is out, and I am off.

Looking back, but also forward.

On our last day in Warsaw, we had a slightly teary farewell with my newly acquired big brother.

What a deeply special week it had been. One I will never forget. Filled with serendipitous moments that I will cherish forever.

Both of us, newly connected brother and sister, connecting and learning up close about pivotal places in our father’s, grandmother’s and grandfather’s history.

My grandmother, Natalia, who remained in Poland for the rest of her life after our father fled in 1963, had an extraordinary story of her own. I feel quite compelled to understand her especially. She never knew she had a granddaughter, and this alone makes me want to feel, in some way, that I am reaching out to her.

Natalia lived behind the Iron Curtain until it collapsed in 1989. Despite a warm invitation from her only son to join him and his family in Queensland, she chose to remain in her beloved Poland, living out her final years in a country recovering from communism but — at last, finally free.

She was only nineteen when she had my father, two years before Germany invaded Poland. He would be her only child, just as I was nineteen when I first became a mother. Only three years later, she was a starving widow who, along with her baby son, would come close to death herself, over and over again, for many years.

She also accomplished an extraordinary career in STEM for herself, in one of the toughest periods of history, and undoubtedly one of the hardest countries in which to achieve that. My brothers have recently discovered radio interviews and a book she is mentioned in, and we now understand that she was the first woman in Poland — technically, perhaps all of Europe — to be a radio technician.

This career, which she started as a young woman before the war, held her in good stead during the pre-war and post-war years, but also in the years she, her mother and her son were entrapped in Siberia. The Russians made use of her skills on their own radio towers, and we have come to learn from her own memoirs, and stories passed from my father to his sons, that this skill, along with the savviness of her Ukrainian mother, is directly attributed to their survival.

So my scientific brain, which I would like to claim more readily than I am honestly able, might not even have formed if not for my grandmother being a woman ahead of her time, establishing a successful career and navigating the world as a single mother.

So when my brother and I visited the church she worshipped in for the latter part of her life and sat in on a service, needless to say it was emotionally charged for both of us.

We sat side by side, immersed in the soothing words of the sermon from the Polish priest as they reverberated around the walls of that beautiful old church. We did not understand what he was saying, but we felt warm and united, his words and the prayers settling around us like a soft, comforting blanket.

We sat there absorbing the significance of where we were and what it meant. Not only as two newly connected siblings, but as the children and grandchildren of people whose lives had been shaped by suffering, faith, endurance and exile.

Our father and grandmother were both deeply Catholic, and their faith was not a small or occasional part of their lives. It was central to who they were. It travelled with them through war, separation, Siberia, hunger, fear and loss. It held them through the impossible years, and it remained with them into later life, when so much else had been taken, changed or left behind.

Sitting there together, in a church that had clearly mattered deeply to her, we understood a little more of what that faith must have given them. For people who had endured so much, Catholicism must have been more than ritual or habit. It must have been shelter, structure, memory and hope. A place to put grief when there was nowhere else for it to go. A place to speak to the people they had lost. A place to keep going.

We have one photo that shows our late father sitting alone in that same church the year she died. We can see the back of his head, shoulders slumped slightly forward, the same black-and-white tiled floor beneath him as he farewelled his beloved matka.

And now, all these years later, there we were too.

His children, unknown to him and to each other for most of our lives and all of his, sitting in the same church, feeling the weight and wonder of it all. It felt almost unearthly, but also very real, as if loving hands had come to rest gently on both our shoulders.

The tears that fell on each of our cheeks felt warm and full of gratitude.

Afterwards, we walked to the block of modest flats she lived in, and then on to the cemetery where she is buried. With few words exchanged between us, we went about cleaning the headstone and placing fresh candles and flowers there.

A few words spoken to our unknown Babcia.

Les asked me, “Was there a day or an experience that stood out more, when you thought you could sense their presence?”

It was an important question.

And this was the day.

Although, in a lighter moment, we did wonder if either our father or grandmother were looking down on us that day — as we sat in on the service and tended her grave — perhaps asking each other who on earth we actually were.

We also had a day paying homage to our grandfather. He was a colonel of sappers in the Polish Army and is recognised on Wikipedia as a war hero. When Poland was invaded in 1939, he, his rather beautiful young wife — my grandmother — and their baby son lived in an impressive apartment in Warsaw. Their lifestyle had been quite a socially esteemed one. Sadly like more than 90% of Warsaw that apartment and nearly every other persons home and business were completely obliterated by the Nazis during World War Two. The Polish people have done a truly remarkable job of rebuilding their beloved city . Often relying on post cards and old photos to restore with as much originality as possible.

The three of us also took a taxi out to Modlin Fortress, on the outskirts of Warsaw, to stand inside one of the great military strongholds connected to Poland’s long and battered history. Modlin is one of Poland’s largest fortress complexes and was defended through several conflicts, including the German invasion of 1939, when it became one of the last Polish strongholds to surrender.

As we climbed the tower and looked out across the broad sweep of land and river below, we learned more about the hardships endured by the Polish military across generations of war, occupation and resistance. It gave another layer of weight to our grandfather’s story, and to the courage of those who kept fighting for Poland, even when the odds against them were almost impossible.

He wrote a diary in his own hand that describes his thoughts and circumstances from September 1st, 1939. Amazingly, many years later, that same handwritten diary made its way from across the world to London and into the hands of his only son — my father.

It is a heartbreaking but beautifully written account of what he saw and experienced in those first days as he managed to flee Poland, find refuge for his wife and son, and face the few remaining months of his life as he endeavoured to get to France to keep fighting.

He died in Romania, in a camp, on the 16th of February 1940.

It was not long after this that the Soviets knocked on my great-grandmother’s door in a small village and forced them into cattle wagons for the long journey to Siberia.

So, for me, aside from being a fabulous city, and one I will come back to one day, Warsaw connected me in ways I can only begin to find the words for in this blog.

But eventually, it was time to say goodbye to the first and most impactful leg of our journey in Warsaw.

We packed our bags, collected the hire car, and slowly began to shift from the deep emotional intensity of Warsaw into the first proper leg of our Polish road trip. There was something symbolic about it — leaving the city of our family’s war stories, prayers, losses and beginnings, and driving north towards the Baltic coast.

We bid farewell — or rather, see you soon — to my big brother as he headed back to his London home, and Les and I pointed the car towards Gdańsk.

The road opened ahead of us, and with it came the feeling that the trip was changing gears. Warsaw had asked us to look back. Gdańsk, we hoped, might let us breathe a little.

We were ready for some lighter moments and more indulgent European vacation food, wine and ambience — the things we have loved on our travels.

And on the first day we arrived, Gdańsk did not disappoint.

A gorgeous, colourful waterfront Old Town, with all that is needed to romanticise Europe at its best, greeted us from day one. We were starting to feel better too, so there was much to celebrate.

What we didn’t expect, but are still so grateful to have experienced, was the steep historical learning curve we gained in this seaside Baltic town, where the birth of the amber trade began and where the Solidarity movement began before spreading far beyond Poland. We knew about the Wall coming down in 1989, and we knew about the collapse of communism, but we didn’t know how complex and brilliantly constructed the whole process was.

The Solidarity museum delivered us yet another big emotional punch and a serendipitous stroke.

So while, like in Warsaw, we ate and drank like kings and filled our traveller hearts with all the juicy stuff we cherish in Europe, Gdańsk gave us a little more to drink from the cup of Poland and its treasures.

Then we travelled on to Toruń, a quieter but very medieval-style town, and then on to the impressive big city of Wrocław. Both delivered in different ways for different reasons, but our eyes had been on what multiple people told us would be the highlight — our final five nights in Kraków.

And yes, they were right.

Kraków was largely spared the physical destruction of Warsaw and some of the other cities we had visited. Arriving with resurrected head colds was not exactly part of our plan, but we have soldiered on. And, as in any sensible travel plan, when feeling a little fatigued and yo-yoing around with a cough and head cold, the most sensible thing to do on the first day, to cheer up and recover, is obviously to go on a ten-kilometre, seven-hour visit in the cold, wet rain to Auschwitz.

Also excellent for my introspective brain trying to switch gears and write about less emotional subjects and get into the practical travel part of this blog.

Well…

Unsurprisingly, that didn’t quite work.

But with our days in Poland running out and Prague beckoning only two days away, we have recalibrated, focused on resting to get better, and absorbed the heartbreaking and important visit with all the respect and understanding it deserves, as we move back into a more lighthearted take on this delightful city.

In my newfound Polish family, it turns out I also have a Polish great-aunt — by marriage to my grandmother’s only brother. Her name was Janina Piskor, and she was a pianist from Kraków before the war.

While on the run with millions of other Poles after Germany invaded from the west and Russia from the east, she met and fell in love with a fellow Pole. He is my great-uncle, and somehow the two of them survived the ordeal via many other countries, including Japan, before eventually settling in London with a bookshop.

Janina wrote a novel in 1948 called Under Strange Skies. There has only been one old copy in the family, and I decided to read her novel before this trip. It was a book I ended up devouring, every word of it, and she has become another strong woman I want to know more about.

So Kraków has also become a destination for me to gain a connection to her.

https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/130406451-under-strange-skies

Les and I found ourselves sitting in a dimly lit, old-world underground wine bar on our first night, and I read aloud some of the pages from that 1948 novel, where she describes sitting in Jama Michalika, near the main square of the Old Town in Kraków. She describes the place as a favourite meeting place for writers, musicians, artists and the general creative community of Kraków at that time.

Sipping our cocktails on that drizzly evening, warm and snug, I said to Les, “Have I read enough? Do you want me to stop?”

“No, not at all,” he said. “Please keep going.”

So for the next little while, the two of us sat there, me reading with a steadier voice than usual despite my cold, and Les beside me taking in every word.

When I finished, we sat quietly, and Les eventually said, “How amazing would it be if that café still existed?”

And in that moment, despite it not being remotely likely, I knew in my heart that it would.

The longest-running artistic café in Kraków, still to this day called Jama Michalika.

Needless to say, the next morning, once Google had confirmed its survival, we made tracks and found the old gem very quickly, tucked close to our apartment. As we wandered in, piano music drifted through the ornate old-world rooms, past stained-glass internal windows, framed photos of past patrons, and artistic sketches lining the walls. We were both overwhelmed with enthusiasm, and felt again that some deeper guiding hand had brought us there.

As we sat there, drinking coffee in one of the oldest surviving continually running cafés in Kraków, I could almost feel the sweet presence of those who had gathered there long before us. The echoes of laughter, conversation, longing, grief and small triumphs from times so long ago seemed to drift gently through the warm spaces around us.

This journey has also reminded me how many of life’s most meaningful moments arrive quietly between husband and wife — not always as grand declarations, but as shared glances, tired laughter, meals, wrong turns, and the simple act of being side by side. They are the moments that keep us connected and add, layer by layer, to the depth and abundance of our gratitude for our lives.

Just like the beautiful church service in my grandmother’s church, sitting beside my newfound big brother, and reading to Les in a magical dimly lit wine bar called Cyrano, this trip has had an abundance of special moments, but these three stand out and feel worthy of this blog.

Still, we have one more full day.

And who knows what tomorrow will bring.