Magic hour at Keleti train station, in Budapest |
The train has only pulled out of the station a few minutes ago, and it already takes on the familiar feeling of a Hungarian train.
The polite exchange of seats, as those with reservations ask those without reservations to get out of their seats.
The sound of a can of Dreher being opened. Then another. Then another.
A lady sitting down across the table from us, pulling out a tin-foiled bundle and unwrapping a sandwich.
At the next station, a man sits beside her. As the train pulls out, he too pulls a tin-foiled sandwich from his luggage, unwraps it, and takes a bite.
We already finished our snacks and sandwiches.
Train travel is easily romanticized, as if it's still like solving mysteries on the Orient Express or watching the world blur past you on a bullet train.
But for most of us, it's a necessity. No Belgian detectives solving mysteries. And it's the local, so there's plenty of stops and no bullet speed.
So if you must take the train, why not make the most of it and stretch out and crack open a beer? You have to pay for the train ticket, so pay for train food when you can eat a delicious sandwich?
Any kind of travel doesn't need pricey upgrades or faux luxury. Often, it's the simple pleasures that make the trip worthwhile.
A ride on a Hungarian train is a refreshing return to that grounded normalcy.
Once,
on a flight from Budapest to Rome, I unwrapped my own tin-foiled
wrapped salami sandwich. The old lady across the aisle from me nodded in
approval. The flight attendant man gave me the
stink eye.
It's not his fault. Airlines have managed to monetize every last bit of enjoyment of travel, while removing the last shred of dignity from the experience of flying.
Passengers are treated like cattle, milked for every cent.
In the process, they've priced out the
simple pleasures. Can you really, truly enjoy a $10
beer? Or do you feel compelled to tell yourself that it's a good beer?
And what about those sandwiches made under questionable circumstances with unidentifiable ingredients?
Train companies have yet to crush the joy of traveling and the simple pleasures that come with it: leg room, a homemade lunch, and cold beer.
These things aren't sacred or even necessary, but they add something unmistakable to a train ride. That's something Hungarian train passengers haven't forgotten.