After the people that we miss the most the next thing, and pretty high on the list, is our shower. OK, everyone in America who takes their shower for granted stand up...I see a couple people in the back who didn't bother to stand but I believe most of you would agree. We take our showers for granted until...we use someone else's. The ones in the hotels in Virginia and New York weren't too bad. Not like home but not too bad. When we got to Köln, Germany we were in a four star hotel. One would think they would have a pretty snazzy shower. It was pretty, lots of glass, marble and stainless steel, but the shower had no curtain. It had this little glass panel about 18 inches wide that was attached to the wall so that if one stands under the stream, faces away and outstretches one's arms, they extend beyond the glass panel. How the heck is that supposed to keep the water inside the tub or shower stall? The four star hotel in Madrid was a little better. The glass panel was maybe 24 inches wide. Most people in the US have a curtain that covers wall to wall and has those little magnets to keep it in place. We are talking probably a six foot curtain.
The shower in our apartment in Sevilla is better than the one in Köln and better than the one in Madrid but it is a far cry from the one we have at home. The "shower curtain" here is a folding plastic door with two panels and is maybe 36 inches wide. It covers about half the tub.
At our home we have a separate shower stall about five by six feet, with it's own glass door that closes it off and makes it a separate room. Right after we get home and greet everyone we haven't seen in a while I am getting in that shower, turning the water on "blast" and showering until we run out of hot water.
Kinda reminds me of when I came home after my first year in Viet Nam, I just stood there for the longest time flushing the toilet over and over and watching the water go down. I believe that after our loved ones it's the simple things in life that we take for granted and miss the most when we don't have them.
Ah, the simple things we take for granted ... this made me chuckle, Bill. However, I often think about things I take for granted, then pause to thank God for them (things like my health, a comfortable home, plenty of food, a reliable car.) We truly are blessed! I miss you and Karen too, despite our Skype conversations. I'm thankful that we have email and Skype, but it's so much better to visit in person. I look forward to your return. Although July seems pretty far away, I'm sure it will pass before we know it. We'll be talking soon, I'm sure.
ReplyDeleteWhen Sue and I were travelling through the US on our honeymoon, we came across a few rather interesting interpretations of what a bathroom should be.
ReplyDeleteOur trip to Europe a few years later proved to us that the US was not alone in creating bathrooms that baffle and confuse.
We wished we had've taken photos of them all. Would make for an interesting coffee table book.
Dodgy Hotel Bathrooms Across the World. LOL