AFAR – September 2019

(Nandana) #1

42 AFAR SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2019


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  1. Azart
    What it is: “Russia is a tough,
    cold place, so Russians grab
    at happiness with both hands,”
    Russell says. Azart (or “ardor”)
    is the burning urge to lunge at
    everything life throws your way,
    no matter the consequences.
    How to find it: “[In Russia]
    there’s this idea that you’re seek-
    ing heat all the time,” Russell
    says. That desire combines with
    a willingness to suffer, which
    explains Russian bathhouse
    culture. A bathhouse session is
    not only about sweating pro-


fusely but also about smacking
yourself with birch twigs and run-
ning outside afterward to cover
yourself in snow. The Yamskiye
Bani bathhouse in St. Petersburg,
said to have been frequented
by Dostoyevsky and Lenin, is a
good place for travelers to start.
Russians also chase heat in
conversation: They skip the small
talk and immediately dive deep.
In their homes they call this
posidelki, or “kitchen talks.” Vodka
can help facilitate the kind of no-
B.S. conversations Russians seek
and excel at. As travelers are not
likely to be spontaneously invited

A ROAD MAP TO HAPPINESS
What makes people satisfied is different in every culture. Your passport can
be a tool for understanding those unique types of contentment.
by Billie Cohen

In her new book The Atlas of
Happiness: The Global Secrets
of How to Be Happy, U.K.-born,
Denmark-based author Helen
Russell takes readers on a round-
the-world trip—not to the usual
tourist attractions but through
distinct concepts of happiness
that have evolved in 30 countries.
She illustrates each via locals’
personal experiences.
Here, Russell walks us through
five of the book’s lesser-known—
and often misunderstood—hap-
piness ideologies, with practical
advice for channeling them on
your next trip.


into a stranger’s kitchen, they
can shoot for razgovory v poezde,
or “train talks.” And not on just
any train—the Trans-Siberian
Railway, where everyone is
crammed together on a multiday
journey across the sprawling
route, sharing food, sharing
space, and swapping stories. It’s
a surefire way to experience the
distinctly Russian combination
of excitement, risk-taking, and
suffering that leads to happiness.
“It’s hard to explain,” Russell says.
“It’s not a comfy, cozy kind of
feeling. [It’s] more like you feel
really alive.”
Free download pdf