Upon arriving in Italy I immediately noticed two things --the tights, and the graffiti. The women in Italy have a way of casually throwing together an outfit with the most intricately
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While traveling I'd become accustomed to hearing the phrase "Ciao bella!" when greeted by the men in Italy. It made me smile. Prior to leaving the states, I was forewarned about the aggressive nature and crassness of Italian men, but I had yet to encounter anything of the sort. I had grown rather fond of them actually. My guard was down. One day my sister and I were walking through Florence where several street vendors attempted to sell us their wares, we responded with our most useful Italian phrase: "no, grazie." In one such instance after respectfully declining to purchase a painting, one of the vendors called after me "Nice ass, I'd like to fuck!" And there it was. Never had anyone, stateside or otherwise, said anything so ugly. In that moment, I felt a kinship with those beautiful historic buildings, it was as though someone had just scrawled the senseless grafitti across my body.
When reading about Italy in preparation for the trip, I came accross the statistic that the unemployment rate for young people in Italy is around 30% and that a great majority of them live with their parents until well into their late twenties and early thirties. To put that in perspective, the current US unemployment rate is hovering around 8%. In desparate times, people resort to desparate measures to hold on to some sense of dignity, to feel that they are still relevant --still included in the story. In scrawling the graffiti, in hurling ugly words, perhaps it was a way of saying "You will not ignore me. You may have come to tour the buildings and see the sights, but I am still standing here, these cities were built centuries ago...but today, I am here, I am struggling, and I am frustrated." I chose not to dignify the comment with a response, but I continued to notice the hideous grafitti everwhere. On my last night in Milan, while looking for postcards I took a wrong turn and looked up to find a beautifully grafittied doorway. I smiled and silently thanked God for reminding me that there is always beauty to be found amidst the rabble.
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