Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Try to Be Where You Are

With approximately 50 days left here in Buenos Aires, I'm hanging on to the words once relayed to a group of 20 of us foreigners us by a hippie who guided our curious minds around the mountains and the Cordoban landscapes.

"Try to Be Where you Are."

Six months later.

So she finally was.

With a sense of nostalgia already kicking in, and such limited time left here, I have decided to delete my facebook, free myself of the time suck of social networks, and focus on my real social networks-- relationships at my fingertips, life without a newsfeed, and adventures on the 14th floor in the middle of t one of he busiest streets in one of the most lovely cities.

Afterall, this was the view from my balcony at sunset. And it doesn't even begin to capture the rosy sky that left me in yet another a dizzy romance with BA.



Also, as I felt a ping of homesickness on an overcrowded, sweaty bus ride home today, I remembered this quote:

“No one realizes how beautiful it is to travel until he comes home and rests his head on his old, familiar pillow.” – Lin Yutang

Until then, my former loyal facebook friends,

Goobye and Goodluck.

XO,
B

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Quick and Dirty Updates

Phew, it’s been a while, no?

My blog is lonely and begging for some attention. So, I’m blocking out an hour or so to fill in my whopping 14 (but dedicated) blog followers about my life in the big ol’ city.

First off, let’s get one thing clear. I will turn 21 years old in something like…9 days. Which is at first, very exciting. But also downplayed and a bit boring as 1. None of my crazy girlfriends are with me and 2. I’ve been taking tequila shots legally since I arrived in South America ten months ago.

Even then, being able to legally down a mojito in front of my alcohol-frigid mother will be quite the satisfying venture.  

Okay, so not boring at all.

I’m looking back and am realizing I haven’t updated this since I was with Sarah Abel the Kiwi in early January.
We have a lot to talk about. Pardon the headings. They are the only thing that will keep this (somewhat) organized.

ON THE LAST DAYS

After Cartagena, Colombia (which still stands as the best city I’ve been to) we made a pit stop in Ecuador, to see the famous Sara Randolph, who graced us with her everlasting stories about her explosive diahhrea an lack of friends. Cute, Sara. We are all wondering why you’re still single.



We celebrated Sarah’s (the kiwi) 23rd birthday with too many booze and not enough boys, and had a blast of a time.



Then we headed to Peru, to see the magical Macchu Pichhu, which is just too good for my blog.
I’ll post a picture, and you can form the words yourself.



Told you. Speechless, right?

Peru was where we parted ways. It was sad and stressful, as we were both pulled into a private room in the Cusco airport, offered cigarettes from creepy Peruvian men in no official uniform whatsoever, and , searched for drugs. Lovely.

I miss her. 

ON BOLIVIA

Then came Bolivia.

Bolivia was the place where I was strip searched twice, charged 140USD for a layover, kicked out of the airport and forced to pay ungodly amounts for a hotel, couldn’t breathe because of the altitude, ran out of food money (I am sadly lacking a debit card of any kind, so mama has to wire me money), got hopelessly screwed (and lost my bag.

Needess to say, I hate Bolivia.

Enough of that.

ON RETURNING TO BUENOS AIRES

I’ll never forget the feeling that gnawed at my stomach the first time I flew into Buenos Aires in July of 2011. It was like something was sitting on my chest and crushing my stomach. I wasn’t sure what it was—was it excitement? I hoped so. Nerves? Probably. Fear? Definitely. I’d studied Spanish but had taken two years off to study beer pong and frat boys instead, and knew communication would be rough. For anyone who thinks that language is something you can easily learn from a text book, you are so wrong. Point aside, I was completely out of my comfort zone and wished, as the passengers applauded the safe landing, that we were still up in the air.

However, The second time I flew into Buenos Aires, my stomach turned for totally different reasons. One was because I was recovering from my burning hatred for Bolivia. And the second? Because I was home. I knew exactly what to do, where to go, how to say, “Che, I need something from you. Can you help?” in perfect Spanish etc. It was a new, beautful experience. One of excitement, of new beginnings, of comfort.

Borges (my recent obsession) explains his return to Buenos Aires after a decade away in An Autobiographical Essay, published in the New Yorker sometime before my lifetime. He so eloquently states, “It was more than a homecoming, it was a rediscovery. I was able to see Buenos Aires keenly and eagerly because I had been away from it for a long time. Had I never gone abroad, I wonder whether I would ever have seen it with the peculiar shock and glow that it now gave me.”
I couldn’t have said it better myself. Peculiar shock. Crazy excitement. In a new light. Borges was brilliant.

For me, this is how every place is. The second (or twentieth) time is always better. When you leave it, you become nostalgic. Which is why going home gets better every time.  

So.

Update on my life here in Buenos Aires, currently.
As for money, I landed an oddly good gig writing horoscopes. Don’t ask me how. The story goes something like: I applied for anything and everything on Craigslist, walked out writing horoscopes and getting a good chunk of money each week.

AND! I have been tour guiding. I started my own little company called Bry’s BA Tours which is half vacation planning, half tour guiding. The cash is tremendous. And what better way to learn more about the most lovely city on earth?

As for living arrangements, I am on the 14th floor on the most lively street in the city, with two fabulous boys called Cain and Alex. This 14th floor is (thankfully) full of good friends, good food, and good dinner table conversations.


I can’t think of much else. Classes are good. Hunger games comes out today. I am taking a short story literature class at a little English bookstore. You should read Flannery O’Connor if you get the chance.
Other than this, I’m living the good life, with a promise of Mexican food and snickerdoodle cookies in the evening. 



The family and little brown boy arrive Sunday. Yay! 

More to come. 

xoxo, B

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Help Me Start My New Project

Ever just needed to write it down? Share something with the world?

Now you can.

Share fiction, non-fiction, poetry, political view, anything.

The catch?

You only have 100 words to spill your guts.

Help me get started with a new project.

Share the site with your friends, families, writers, non-writers.

My goal: To get 100 worders from all over the world. You never know what your 100 words can do for a person.

See the site here: Just 100 Words

And like us on Facebook. Just 100 Words


Thanks, pioneers! (A new post about life is on its way, too. Stay tuned)
XO
B

Monday, January 23, 2012

Cartagena, Colombia: You have My Heart

Ahh,

The little cobblestone streets full of dulces (sweets) and subtle (but lovely) nightlife of Cartagena, Colombia are enough to make staying in Hotel Toledo (at 16USD a night--check out photos below: I legitimately thought there were bed bugs) totally... and I mean totally worth it.

The people are just how you imagine them: friendly, helpful, dark-skinned, and toothy--always smiling. Their accent is almost incomprehensible but it´s so similar to a song that it doesn´t matter. The Colombianos laugh and dance on the streets and don´t make a fuss if the tourbus gets a flat tire--as long as there is unlimited fake rum and good live music in the back of the bus.

These tours are called Chivas, and it might be the best tour I´ve ever been on. They pick you up in a big, windowless, as-loud-as-your-deaf-grandmother bus on South American time (LATE) and give you a tour of the city, all of which you´ll be lucky to remember after they´ve supplied you with unlimited Cuba Libres. They take you to a place where you can see the beach, maybe have a tipsy conversation with an interesting local, and if you´re really lucky (Sarah Abel), you might be able to hold a sloth. Yes, sloth.

Note: Sarah gave too many pesos at the end of her sloth carry to ensure the sloth was well-taken care of. She said this to the owner in English. He speaks only Spanish. Classic.

"I held a sloth!" has been the most screamed phrase, I´m sure of it, in Cartagena history.

I met Argentines on the tour, who of course, reaked of buena onda, as all of them do. It made me excited to go back, despite the early end to the travel adventures.Tomorrow we´re off to Quito, to see Sara Randolph, and to hopefully pick her up for our trek to Macchu Picchu. If you see her, tell her to put her big girl pants on and come with us.

I´m sure you´ll hear the juice of the upcoming days. Or maybe you won´t, with us three and Quito´s prices, it´s going to be a party.

One more sunset in Cartagena isn´t enough.

Besos.
B


Fear of Bedbugs








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Saturday, January 21, 2012

From High Hopes to Empty Bank Accounts

I wake up on the shuttle, groggy and greasy with a neck cramp induced by my inflatable travel pillow. Sarah looks up at me from the seat behind and groans. I can tell she hasn't slept at all.


She says, so rationally in her half- kiwi half-American accent,"Dude. I've had five hours to think and to be honest, we're really tight on money. Like, really tight."

I blow her off and fall back asleep, pushing the worry aside and strolling in on Costa Rica Grayline to Tamarindo, a little surfer town with a gorgeous beach, too many gringos, and expensive everything.


The next evening after dinner, We start to lay it out... Realistically for the first time since Sarah called six months ago and said that, "dude she was coming to backpack South America with me."  We start.to.sketch it out, and laugh hysterically when we realize the most painful thing to a traveller: we have no money, did no research, and are going to have to end our adventures early. Laughing seemed the only option. It is too hard to complain with Costa Rican beer in our hands and a warm breeze on our faces... And a Costa Rican stamp fresh in out passports.


After our laughing fit, we decided the places we wanted to see most. So for all you blog readers (Mom) here's our plan:


Cartagena, Colombia

Quito, Ecuador

Cusco, Peru

Macchu picchu


And then, Sarah goes down under, and I fly 26 hours (it was cheaper and I'm probably going to die) down to Buenos Aires, where I'll be forced to rent a room,  eat choripan,practice Spanish, and write write write for the month before school.


Hard life, right?


Ps. By the time I've finished this, I'm sitting in a 16 USD per night hotel, in Cartagena, Colombia, which might be my favorite city in the world so far. Check out the room pictures above- pretty sure I have bedbugs.


b


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Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Running Out Of Money, Horribly Uncomfortable Hostel Beds, and Giant Sea Turtles.

The title says it all.


And as for Costa Rica, pictured above, decide for yourself.


Ps. Anyone wanna donate ten grand to my travelling fund? Otherwise the plane ticket home is happening. Think about it....


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Sunday, January 15, 2012

The Joy of Layovers

Going from seventy degree sunny to shoved-up-against-a-freezing-window in Fort Lauderdale for four hours is a little less than luxorious. And considering we just exited what seems to be the most ghetto airline on the face of the planet (Spirit AIRLINES,where they so casually charged me three dollars for a glass of water and the plane made so many you're-about-to-die noises that I almost shit my pants with fear), we have started our trip off right...full of adventure.


Speaking of adventure, thanks to ms. Abel for suggesting an early arrival to the airport; we needed it more than she expected. Two hours before our flight, We were told by the check-in dude that we needed a ticket OUT of Costa Rica before we were allowed to enter. Lovely.


Frantic, we called what seemed to be everyone under the sun, and ended up finding our solution under the Australian one, where one of Abel's friends booked us a "ticket" back to LA. Spirit airlines, in all of their proper professionalism, didn't seem to mind that we had completely changed our minds, decided to not backpack, and booked a ticket back to the states for ten days later. As long as, of course, we payed our 43 bucks to check our backpacks.


Needless to say, we owe our lives and the fact that we will be on a beach in less than 24 hours, to a certain technologically brilliant Aussie. She knows who she is.


The adventures are just starting. Stay tuned.

I'll be getting tan.


Xoxo


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Saturday, January 14, 2012

From LA to Costa Rica

It's 11:01 am in sunny (but not warm) LA and Sarah and I are taking advantage of our late check-out, trying to avoid carrying our far-top-heavy backpacks around until our ten pm flight to Costa Rica tonight.


With over 24 hours of travel ahead.of me starting tonight, I can safely say we are off to a brilliant start... Although the plush hotel across the street from Disneyland may have spoiled us for hostels.


We've eaten cheesecake in our own double beds, seen mickey, ridden space mountain and made a make-shift ghetto refrigerator... Two hours before finding the real one.


We can sum up this LA pitstop with one word: excess. Excess food, excess sleep, excess fun, excess money have all played a part in a little bit of excess paradise.


See you in Costa Rica!


XOXO


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Sunday, January 8, 2012

Here We Go Again....

The Basics of the Trip:


I currently have:

  • Not enough money
  • One 60 Liter Backpack 
  • A plan to meet a kiwi (New Zealander) friend in LA, for Disneyland and such. 
  • A one-way ticket to Costa Rica 
  • Approximately 70 days to get down to Buenos Aires for school
  • An empty journal
  • Not enough sunscreen
  • No itinerary
  • A GPS tracker, just in case
  • Butterflies in my stomach
More to come.

So.
PUMPED.