Friday, November 19, 2010

No honey bunches, but it could save the world

I love breakfast cereal. At home, Massachusetts home and Pennsylvania home, I stock what I like to think of as "grown-up cereals." You know, the really fancy and kind of pompous ones that contain 5 different nuts and dried fruits from 10 different countries and do not put mazes on the back or prizes inside. (which is a real shame....) I need nutrition and an ego boost to get me going in the morning.

In Peru, those cereals are generally imported and "costosos," and I couldn't justify it. (But you could justify spending $40 to have chocolate chips and peanut butter shipped to you? I choose my battles.) Also couldn't convince myself to go native and have a ham sandwich. So I buy the cheapies and mix them together.


It's really not bad. I like them.
For a kilo for about 3 bucks, I like them even more. AND though no mazes, I can read about the adventures of Angel Mel, Angel Chock, Angel Zock, and Angel Flakes. They save planet Without-Flavor from the evil villain Such-Wickedness who makes food boring.

And aren't they cute?

But I think Captain Crunch could take 'em.

Have a great weekend!!

Wow. Put this up a couple hours ago and just realized I mispelled "honey." IN THE TITLE!! Clearly, my brain only has room for one language.

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Extravagance at faire o' the chick



Yeah, it was pretty much like a James Bond chick sitting in a Christmas tree bulb.














Except not at all.
(At least this one wasn't wearing 5 inch heels to chase bad guys. Am I right?)






















New red bag. Love it..........................>>>............ For the Christmas tree!













Cost the equivalent of 35 cents. I know.>>> M>>M>Didn't have to go to Vegas.













Awesome skirt but....>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>You're being a little judgy right now, huh?

And various and sundry Christmas presents. So y'all can hope.


And introducing....since I posted this the first time....

So I had a few minutes to spare today...and they fit me like a glove...only $8...I'm weak basically.



Toodles!

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

traffic-lovers and other mysteries

Most strangeness in Lima is connected with some larger, interconnected phenomenon of strange. These little buggers don't seem to be:

Why do all salespeople put your change on a little tray instead of in your hand?

Why do the maintenance men carry all their equipment in huge cages on the front of a bike? (Maybe the better question is why we haven't come up with that genius little contraption?)

Why don't the office supply stores have regular folders? (You know, your basic cardboard with two pouches on either side? Nonexistent.)

Why do Peruvians seem to have less qualms about picking their noses in public? (If we pick, do we not bleed?)

And finally....

Why don't more people get out of the buses and WALK when traffic is bumper to bumper for miles every night? Seriously! I've seen people get on behind traffic. I walk at least 6 blocks on Javier Prado every day and stroll on nearly empty sidewalks by dozens of packed micros.

If you figure these out, you let me know.

P.S. I realize "strange" is a relative term. I've met quite a few Peruvians who are fascinated by the concept of eating Chinese food from a box. "Just like the movies!"

Some other mysteries I've solved, can you?:
































No, you're right. Nescafe's still a mystery.

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

How many times before I'm a regular?

That's the name of my favorite restaurant in Peru, Magdalena del Mar. If you’re reading this and you're here too, you should go. If you’re not, you should envy me that I can go.

Some of the reasons I like it:

No one shouts at me and ropes me in like cattle outside the door.

The service is the correct balance between nowhere-in-sight and fogging–up-my-glasses.

The food reminds me of the Olive Garden, but better. (You better not be hating on the Olive Garden in your head right now…)

They play soothing Italian opera quietly in the background.


I realize after almost all of these statements I could add “like my favorite restaurants in the States.” But don’t lie, you too sat in the same place everyday in high school EVEN AFTER the teacher stopped assigning seats, didn’t you?


Always onion bread before my meal! FREE! And I get the same cappuccino every time.

Monday, November 15, 2010

Parties, paddle boats, and a movie marathon


A great weekend in Nazca and Huacachina! Sasha and I did not see the Nazca lines by plane (nothing like some downed tourists to kick the prices up) but we did see about a dozen of thousand-year-old mummies.

Huacachina is a beautiful little oasis in the middle of the desert, and the sandboarding near there was AWESOME. I even tried standing up. Once. So the next time you find yourself in the area....


Tons of potential, truly authentic Halloween costumes just lying by the paths.

Some new anecdotes I can tell at parties:

In the car ride out to see the Nazca Lines

Me: So what do the people here think about all the tourism? (You know, wanting to be all anthropological.)

Jeffrey(our guide): They mostly think it’s a good thing. It’s how we live. (Pause) But you know, you can’t generalize.

M: Ah, yeah. (Wait, what?) Generalize about what?

J: Listen, friend, I’m not going to say anything about all the tourists. People are different. You know, like if someone doesn’t want to drink with us, that’s fine! Or if someone wants to go to bed early, good, rest! Some people like that.

M: (Are we still talking about tourism?) Yeah. We do.

J: But sometimes the people staying in the hostal say to me, “Hey, Jeffrey, can you get us a little marijuana, or a little cocaine? Is that possible?” And I say, “Of course it’s possible! C’mon. How could it not be possible? We’re in Peru! Everything is possible in Peru! And they say, “How long will that take?” And I say, “Oh please, 5 minutes no más!”

Obviously translated and paraphrased. Except those last two words, whose spirit just couldn’t be conveyed any other way.

Apparently Jeffrey thought we knew that tourists in Nazca have a reputation of being drunken, drugged partiers. And now we do. He also may have been looking to make a little pocket change. Which he didn't.

Our room at the hostal in Nazca. I'm a new fan of hostals.

Plaza de Armas in Nazca

Near the paddle boats on the lake in Huacachina

Sasha and I get on the boats, giggling about the tiny kiddy umbrellas they’ve just handed us to keep off the sun, which is just middling warm.

Paddle boat man (who had been rather pushy and rude beforehand): You pay now.

Me: Oh, sure. How much is it?

PBM: 15 soles. (A little more than five bucks.)

Us: EACH??

PBM: Each.

We exchange looks, shake our heads incredulously. 15 soles for a 20 minute paddle boat ride? Highway robbery. Or… high seas robbery. Teehee.

Me(probably a bit pissy): Then we’re getting off. (We hand him our umbrellas.)

PBM (keeping his foot on it and standing in our way, looking, to me, slightly threatening): Why are you getting annoyed? Don’t get annoyed.

Me: Well I get annoyed when some pushy salesmen takes advantage of two American girls who generously decide to pay for the privilege of risking their lives in his paint chipping, decade old, at-the-bottom-of-the-lake-at-any-moment paddle boat, you thief. Now get your freakin foot off and let us get the heck off of here! No really! I would've said that if I had any idea how to do it in Spanish.

It was more like: I’m not, we’re just getting off.

PBM: How much did you think it was?

Well, we had thought it was less than 5 soles total. But at the time it seemed unlikely that even this guy would jack the price up more than six times for a couple of gringas. In retrospect, I’m not so sure. But paddle boats basically was our morning itinerary.

Us: 5 soles each.

PBM (after consulting with the guy next to him, like we were really getting a steal): Fine. Go ahead.

Us: What about the umbrellas?

PBM: You don’t get any umbrellas. (Pushes us off.)

Well, we got a good laugh for our five soles each.


^^Look at me! I'm dying from heat! What ever could have prevented it?^^



The movie on the late night bus ride

I don't really even know what it was, since part of the time I was sleeping and part of the time I was listening to Modern Scholar's The History of the English Language in audio form. (Raise your hand if you're cool enough to be excited that English was once a synthetic language!)

I did catch enough to know that the crappy sound system only became unbearable in the airplane scene, my chest became tight if I glanced up when they were water-boarding some chick, and Sylvester Stallone clearly has a medical condition in which his forehead cannot move.

How do I know all this you ask? They played the move two and a half times straight through. At some point I think I heard people begging them to take it out. (And possibly threatening to throw themselves out of the vehicle. Or that could've been the voice in my head.)

Finally, something inspired them in the middle of the third run to turn the darn thing off completely. And just when I was sure that every person on that bus was breathing a sigh of relief, some lady in the back yells in a high pitch voice, "Señor! Turn on the television! Turn it on!"

But happily, that woman will never know if even the great Stallone could save the day three times in a row.

Sorry so long. Happy Monday!

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Birthday wishes which could be my last....

Today I’m scrambling to get as much homework done as possible (eeerrr...then what was that three hour nap all about Dani?) before heading off tomorrow to fly in some dangerous aircraft and board over a less-than-water-like substance. (clue: it reputedly has lots of GLASS in it. yeah.)


Which means I’ll be away for a few days and won’t have a chance to wish my very dear friend Melissa a happy birthday on the 13th.

And I'm also working with a card which might be just in time to bring Christmas greetings... Can this be remedied? Maybe if I tell you all:

I used to steer clear of the title “best friend” like the plague, cause I was always afraid to offend someone by putting someone else on a higher friend-level than them. (What...tell me you don’t want to be my best friend...) But while I have more fantastic, close friends than I deserve, I’m gonna go out on a limb and finally name Melissa to this long sought after title. (AWWWW...sniff)

To prove it, three random facts I know about her that you probably don’t (accompanied by pics of when we were cute little freshman, since that seems to be the time we took all pics?):

1)When she is working hard on something she types like the computer hit her first. (But I’ve seen her work harder and with more concentration than anyone else I know)

2) She once thought that salt couldn’t be in cookies and cranberry sauce only existed in can-shaped form. (But since then her cooking and baking skills have become creative, beautiful, and apparently delicious. I confess that I've been away through most of them and can't personally attest to that last one.)

3) If she bought something and it’s in her closet it must be worn though she despise it. She's an equal opportunity dresser, as it were. (But she’s my most stylish friend.)


Oooor maybe I just put myself even more in the doghouse with this whole bit. But what I really wants to say is it's a privilege to call myself your friend, my dear. Happy Birthday!

Follow this link for a fantastic singer and fantastic, laid back song dedicated to Mel’s birthday. (She’s the one who first turned me on to Ray LaMontagne, and I owe her big time for that…)

Oh, I'm thinking of just changing my title to Untraveled Worlds. Opinions? They say your title should relate directly to your subject and not be all tricky or clever.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

A history of my thoughts on blogging


At one time I swore up and down that I WOULD NOT, COULD NOT, UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES keep a blog during my time in Lima. Obviously something's changed.

I used to think of a blog, and have seen some blogs done by students who are abroad, as sort of online journals. "Dear Readers, Oh boy did I have fun today! Let me start at the beginning so you don't miss a moment of my very exciting life...." But even if my life was exciting, picture a heap of poor one-page diaries abandoned in a box in an attic somewhere in PA, the short-lived aspirations of a little red-headed girl who wanted to be a writer....someday....

NO WAY
.
Not for me. (Disclaimer: I do actually enjoy FOLLOWING these types of blogs from friends...so we keep that straight.)

But just recently I've started to follow some really great blogs online (see here and here and here to get in on a little bit of that action...) And realized joyfully that a blog can be WHATEVER THE HECK I WANT. Cool, right? I thought so too.

And I now feel a little like that girl from the movie Julie and Julia. "I could write a blog you know. I have thoughts...." ( I think you need to picture me ticked off and eating something or the effect is just not the same) Which is what I was thinking at 1:30 in the morning last night when in sugar-induced insomnia I created this page.

So, this is not a blog about Lima Peru or Machu Picchu or studying abroad. This is about me, my thoughts, my life, or the way my midnight cookies just came out scrumdidilyumptious last night. (Yes, I'm fairly certain the hour had something to do with that.) Of course, it'll all probably go into the mixing bowl here.


So onward and upward.


Enjoy some pictures to catch you up (a little?) on my life in the last three months, since I don't plan on making a concerted effort to that end in print.


The mountains around Machu Picchu...because you've seen enough of the city.


Midnight cookies are not always better...but this time it worked out.


Goodbyes to new friends at the airport. I'm not a cryer, but they're still hard!

"The deer are a Pontificia Universidad de la Catolica marvel!
But are not pets and should not be touched."
But you may have to defend yourself.


My morning traffic from the front seat. ( SCORE!) Infinitely preferable to evening traffic.
(risking life and limb by exposing my camera in a micro, Lima public transport. Hope you appreciate it.)



And oh yeah, the title is from one of my favorite poems by Tennyson:
 I am a part of all that I have met;
Yet all experience is an arch wherethro'
Gleams that untravell'd world whose margin fades
For ever and forever when I move.
How dull it is to pause, to make an end,
To rust unburnish'd, not to shine in use!
There's a lot more.

Yup, that was pretty presumptuous of me, wasn't it?