Jump to Content or Main Navigation

To Peel Potatoes

John P. Deever
Ukraine 1993-1995

"Life's too short to peel potatoes," a woman in my local supermarket announced, as she put a box of instant mashed potatoes into her cart. When I overheard her I nearly exploded.

After recently returning from my Peace Corps stint in Ukraine, I tend to get defensive about the potato in all its forms: sliced, scalloped, diced, chopped, grated, or julienned; then boiled, browned, french-fried, slow-fried, mashed, baked or twice-baked -- with a dollop of butter or sour cream, yes, thank you.

A large proportion of my time in Ukraine was spent preparing what was, in the winter, nearly the only vegetable available. Minutes and hours added up to days spent handling potatoes. I sized up the biggest, healthiest spuds in the market and bought buckets full, then hauled them home over icy sidewalks.

Winter evenings, when it got dark at four p.m., I scrubbed my potatoes thoroughly under the icy tap - we had no hot water - until my hands were numb. Though I like the rough, sour peel and prefer potatoes skin-on, Chernobyl radiation lingered in the local soil, so we were advised to strip off the skins. I peeled and peeled, pulling the dull knife toward my thumb as Svetlana Adamovna had taught me, and brown-flecked stripe after stripe dropped off to reveal a golden tuber beneath. Finally, I sliced them into boiling water or a hot frying pan. My potatoes, my kartopli, sizzled and cooked through, warming up my tiny kitchen in the dormitory until the windows clouded over with steam.

Very often my Ukrainian friends and I peeled and cooked potatoes together, either in my kitchen or in Tanya's or Misha's or Luda's, all the while laughing and talking and learning from each other. Preparing potatoes became for me both a happy prelude to nourishment and, when shared with others, an interactive ritual giving wider scope and breadth to my life.

But how could I explain that feeling to the Instant Woman in a grocery store in the United States? I wanted to say, "On the contrary, life's too short for instant anything."

Now, back home, I'm pressed by all the "instant" things to do. In Ukraine, accomplishing two simple objectives in one day -- like successfully phoning Kiev from the post office and then finding a store with milk -- satisfied me pretty well. I taught my classes, worked on other projects, and tried to stay happy and healthy along the way.

Now it takes an hour of fast driving to get to work, as opposed to twelve minutes of leisurely walking in Ukraine. I spend hours fiddling with my computer to send "instant" e-mail. Talking to three people at once during a phone call is efficient -- not an accident of Soviet technology as in Ukraine. With so much time-saving, I ought to have hours and hours to peel potatoes. Somehow I don't.

What I wish I'd said to the woman in the supermarket is this: "Life's too short to be shortened by speeding it up."

But I wasn't able to formulate that thought so quickly. Instead, I went to the frozen food section and stared at the Budget Gourmet microwave dinners for awhile, eventually coming to the sad, heavy realization that the Szechuan chicken looked delicious -- even if it didn't come with potatoes.

John Deever (Ukraine 1993-1995)

John was an English teacher in Ukraine. He has a B.A. and an M.A. in English. John works at the Haas School of Business at the University of California at Berkeley. This essay won the 1996 Peace Corps Experience Award given by RPCV Writers & Readers.

Copyright © 1996 by John Deever, from RPCV Writers & Readers. Reprinted with permission. Material may not be reproduced in any form without the express written permission of the copyright holder.

Last updated Sep 29 2008

Apply Now

Play the Game

Do you wonder what it is like to serve? Returned Volunteers say playing Peace Corps Challenge is like being overseas again.

Monthly Newsletter

Sign up to receive the Peace Corps' free monthly newsletter Passport.

Find Local Events

Peace Corps recruiters appear at information sessions, campus and community events, and career fairs. Pick your state and find a Peace Corps event near you.