Saturday, 17 May 2008

A smattering of photos from Madrid-Sevilla-Granada-Barcelona-Paris.


The main train station of Madrid has a miniature rainforest inside. There were turtles.


Busking flamenco dancer by the lake in Park Retiro.


Nora and I frolick in Park Retiro, like the fairies we truly are at heart.




Please note the daisy crown.


Sevilla was full of these beautiful purple flowers.


Horse-drawn carriages carried all the most sophisticated flamenco dancers to Fería.


The gardens of the Real Alcázar were beautiful and full of knobby trees.


View of the Alhambra and the city of Granada, from the porch of our guesthouse.


It was cold and rainy when we went to the Alhambra gardens, so we wrapped ourselves up to face the wind.




Quality snuggle-time with the guesthouse puppy, a baby boxer who peed and pooped all over the place, and liked playing with my dangly earrings.




Interior of La Sagrada Familia in Barcelona.




Jane is a flower princess.


La Boquería market, in Barcelona.


Cathédrale Notre Dame!


View of Paris from the top of Montmartre. The thing sticking up on the far right (right by the greenery) is the Eiffel Tower.


I am kissing the lipstick-smeared grave of Oscar Wilde. It's a tradition.

Friday, 9 May 2008

For those of you who are wondering when I'm coming back:

21 June. For sure. I'll be arriving in Detroit late that night and driving back to Grand Rapids with my dad, so I won't be seeing any of you Ann Arbor folks right away -- but you should expect a visit from me sometime within a week or two of my arrival. Offers of places to crash are quite welcome.

xoxo.

Wednesday, 7 May 2008

I know you are, but what am I?

Looks like I've made London angry by all the nasty things I've said behind his back, and he's out to prove me wrong. I have never before seen such consistent good weather in London, and have not in a long time spent so much time wandering around out of doors, and reading in sunny parks and squares, as I have the past five days. Today the temperature got into the 80s. Lavender and deep purple lilacs are to be seen everywhere. While my family was here, we had to keep the heater going all night; now, I leave both my windows open all night.

In short, London is trying to prove that he has just as much sunshine and just as many flowers as Spain does -- though, despite the awful, cold weather I had while in Spain, I can't say I'm thoroughly convinced by this sudden show of gallantry. He's doing his best, though.

And yes, London is male. Just because.

Saturday, 3 May 2008

A visit from the family.

As you know, my mother, step-dad, sister and brother flew into London the morning of Thursday before last. We didn't do much Thursday, since everyone was exhausted from jetlag; I just met them at the airport and took them back to the caravan site where we were staying on the outskirts of London. Napping and delicious vegetables and rice for dinner (courtesy of my mom) were the order of the day.

Friday, we took the tube into central London, and I took everyone to see my dorm, after which we had a long walk along the Thames, to see Big Ben and the statue people. We saw Somerset House and the new Globe, ate some pasties, rode a double-decker bus, had some gelato, and rode the London Eye before heading back to the caravan for dinner. It was fun to see everyone's reactions to the things I've gotten so used to over the past 8 or so months.

Things were going pretty well, but if it's not one thing with my family, it's another, and this time my mom dislocated her knee while trying to jump a puddle on our way into town Saturday morning. An ambulance took her to a nearby hospital in the boondocks of London, and we spent much of the following days going to and from the hospital on long bus rides, and trying to figure out just how, exactly, my mom was going to fly back to Chicago with an economy seat, a full-length hard cast and a leg that needs to be constantly elevated.

My siblings and I did a little bit more sightseeing over the course of the trip; I took them through Green Park, past Buckingham Palace, through part of Hyde Park, souvenir shopping along Oxford street, through Picadilly Circus and Leicester Square (where we passed Susan Sarandon being interviewed for a movie premier), past Trafalgar Square, and to several pubs, where they tried jacket potatos, spotted dick with custard, and several pints of ale and/or cider. On a different day, we went to Borough Market and got some gourmet chocolates to take to my mom, saw Tower Bridge, and briefly toured St Paul's Cathedral.

My mom's time at the hospital was made more stressful by the nurses trying to prevent her from receiving visitors, but on the bright side, they served her delicious tea and biscuits every few hours. Finally, we got her back with us to the caravan last Thursday, and took her out to eat at a nearby pub, which was nice. We packed everything up that night, and got up early to take a taxi to the airport, where I left them in the care of a helpful airline disabilities employee, and lugged bags of leftover food and a heavy Red Cross wheelchair (which I will return next week) back to my dorm.

It was nice to see everyone, and weird to try to merge two parts of my life: my family, and my school life in London. But after all the stress, it's been nice to just relax at home for the past few days, catch up on mail (and Facebook), and read poetry (notably Anne Carson and Seamus Heaney) and watch movies (notably Miss Potter) at my leisure. Apparently, the flight back to Chicago went well, and the airport staff were very accomodating. Now, my mom and everyone else is safely back home, relaxing (I hope) and catching up on quality time with Niemann (our black cocker spaniel), who has been miserable in a boarding house this whole time. It's a shame that my family's first trip abroad (for my mom, sister and brother, at least, if not for my step-dad) had to be so stressful, but hopefully it will just be an incentive to be more careful next time -- and I'm determined that there will be a next time.

Wednesday, 23 April 2008

And now?

After arriving back in London late Sunday night, I have:

1. Slept a LOT.
2. Turned in all my papers.
3. Seen Ashton Kutcher at a premier in Leicester Square.
4. Gone to a show of The Importance of Being Earnest at the Vaudeville Theatre.
5. Not done dishes or cleaned my room, both of which are in dire need of being done.
6. Treated myself to a lot of cyder, which I was craving like mad during my travels. Why don't any other countries do hard cider? WHY?

I am now preparing for the arrival of my mother, step-dad, sister and brother at 10:00 tomorrow morning (this morning?), and looking forward to showing them around London for the next 7 days. Now, I'm going to try to get some sleep before getting up early to pick them up from the airport. Ciao, ciao.

Monday, 21 April 2008

Madrid-Sevilla-Granada-Barcelona-Paris

My trip to Spain/Paris was amazing. There's so much to tell. Nora and I took a flight from London to Madrid on 4 April, met Jane at the airport. After some confusion on the metro and with the assistance of an old Spanish lady who became very invested in helping us find the right street, we met our couchsurfing host, Xavier, who spoke fluent English, and who we all agreed was super-sexy. Another couchsurfer, Demetrio, took us into town, where we had our first of many tortillas (slices of cooked egg, potato, and onion inside a small baguette). I also had some delicious pistachio gelato, which was all it took for me to count the day a complete success. We then proceeded to Retiro Park, one of the largest well-kept city green spaces I've seen. We wandered a bit, and laid on the grass and chilled for a bit. I was quite amused by the large quantity of teenagers/20+ couples making out on the lawn. As far as I can tell, Western Europe (excluding the British Isles) is into public displays of affection like WOAH.

After spending a while in the park, Demetrio left to go back to Xavier's, and we three girls spent some more time wandering about the streets. After a few hours and some delicious pizza for dinner, we too headed back to the apartment, where we had some late night laughs with the assortment of people we found there. Demetrio got more and more bizarre as the night progressed, in a way that was usually merely random and hilarious, but sometimes bordered on sexist. We were all thoroughly weirded out when he finally asked to take a picture of us "in our natural state" once we had changed into our nighties.

Next morning, we bought some clementines and pistachios to sustain us on our wanderings, and headed off to the centre of town, where we saw a ridiculous number of statue people lining the streets, and made our way to the Palacio Real of Madrid. We didn't feel the need to go in, since we wanted to get to the Reina Sofía, the art museum where Picasso's La Guernica is housed, but we did see a very cool old man playing Für Elise on partially filled wine glasses. At the Reina Sofía, I wasn't able to get much into the modern artwork in the other areas (since, as we all know, I'm neither an art person nor a museum person, in general), but La Guernica was very impressive, even if it was surrounded by an enormous crowd and electronic wires that beeped obnoxiously when you got too close. I also enjoyed much of the other Picasso's they had on display, but soon, my feet were getting sore from standing still so much, and that is always the point where my whiny child kicks in and forces me to vacate the premises.

After the museum, the warm weather steered us back to the park, where we wandered more and eventually ended up at the lake. There, we watched a pair of super-sexy flamenco dancers busking on the walkway, and somehow ended up with a huge bagful of gummy candies, on a rowboat on the lake. Nora and I haphazardly steered us about the lake, and we managed to keep the awkward collisions with other rowers to less than ten. :) It was really relaxing, and the water felt like condensed heaven on my feet. After that, we ate dinner (Jane and I had cheese, banana, sugar, and cinnamon sandwiches, which sound weird but were SO DELICIOUS), and then went to a sevillana/flamenco bar/restaurant/club that we thought would be cheap. There was no cover fee, and there were couples of all ages getting their sexy on on the dance floor. So far, so good. Little did we know that the sangria (red wine with fruit juice squeezed in) we ordered would end up costing an Unbelievable Price Which Shall Not Be Named Because It's Too Depressing. Suffice it to say, that a damper was successfully put on our evening, and we didn't stay very long at the bar before leaving with our tails between our legs.

Sunday morning, we headed for Madrid's fleamarket, where we spent a few hours wandering around clothing, crafts, and jewellry stalls. Afterwards, we walked over to what my guidebook told us was the old Jewish Quarter, but now seems to have been converted into the bellydancing stores/cheap kebaps/delicious Indian food Quarter. Then... we once again found ourselves gravitating towards Park Retiro, where I made myself a daisy crown and we frolicked in the greenery like the fairies we are at heart.

That evening, we went to a cheap flamenco show that our couchsurfing host had recommended to us, which turned out to be the experience we were looking for the previous night, but failed to get. There were three dancers, a singer, a guitarist, and a guy keeping time by drumbeat. The experience can truly only be described as orgasmic. The dancing was so intense, melancholy, fierce, seductive, and euphoric, all at the same time. It made me want to drop out of college and spend the next ten years of my life in Spain, learning how to dance.

The next morning/afternoon, Jane and I said goodbye to Nora, and we all left Madrid slightly sunburned, since the weather was so lovely, and since it took us a ridiculous amount of time to find some sunscreen for less than €20. Extremely pertinent sidenote: the Madrid train station that Jane and I departed from contains a miniature rainforest. No joke. The humidity was awful.

And with that, Jane and I were off to Sevilla. Sadly, the lovely weather we had in Madrid was not to last. It was raining when we got to the train station, and it didn't stop for the next 2-3 days (with the exception of short sunny intervals). We arrived in the evening, and didn't do much but share some vegetable paella for dinner, wander around some of the tiny sidestreets, and browse a few insanely expensive flamenco outfit stores.

The next morning, it was raining even harder. We gathered our spirits, and with me wrapped tightly in my rain jacket and Jane making the best of her cheap umbrella, we braved the weather to find our way to Feria, the reason why Sevilla made it onto our itinerary in the first place. We got there early, and it was pretty dead. By this time, we were both very wet and cold, and ended up spotting a tent with gaggles of teenage girls in traditional dress dancing sevillanas with each other. Here, we rested for nearly an hour, before once again convincing ourselves to go out in the cold and make it back to our hostel. We got warm again, made ourselves some food and coffee in the hostel kitchen, and huddled in our room talking for the remainder of the day. It was honestly too nasty outside to do anything else. Later that night, I think we went back to Feria to see if it would be more exciting, but aside from seeing a huge number of beautiful women dressed in beautiful flamenco outfits walking the streets, it was a bit of a disappointment. The tents seemed to be rented out by individual parties, and since we did not belong to any of these parties, we were unable to enter. Normally, there would be daily parades and dancing in the streets, but because of the rain, neither of these took place any of the days we were there.

The next day, we went to the Sevilla cathedral and saw Christopher Columbus's grave. The cathedral was impressive, but it pales in comparison with the Alcázar (an old Moorish fort expanded into a palace for the Christian monarchy), which we went to next. The lacework designs on the interior were amazing, but what really impressed me were the elaborate gardens. We must have wandered around for over an hour; each section of the gardens looked completely different. One part was a maze of shrubbery nearly as tall as I am; another area was filled with headless statues and peahens wandering around; and another area was a passageway overhung with green vines and more roses than I've ever seen before. This was definitely my favorite part of Sevilla, and it more than made up for the disappointment of Feria.

My memory is a little shoddy on this part of the trip (probably because we spent so much time indoors because of the rain, drinking coffee, eating Haribo gummies, and having quality Jane & Pam time), but as far as I can remember, that was all we did that day. We kept on planning on going out to the bars and/or clubs, but were never able to motivate ourselves to go back out into the rain.

The next morning was our last day in Sevilla. We checked out the Plaza España, which was beautiful with it's fountains, saw the bullfighting ring from the outside, did a little bit of wandering through more narrow sidestreets, and were off to the train station for our trip to Granada. On the way to Granada, we each brainstormed a list of things to do before we die, which serious activity was interrupted at one point by a "GOAT ALERT!": approximately 100 goats were clustered together at the side of the rail tracks, taking turns jumping a ravine (presumably to get away from the speeding train). I've never seen so many goats before in my life.

Highlights from my list of things to do before I die:
-Climb a mountain on every continent.
-Get a tattoo that will be awkward to explain to my (potential) children/grandchildren.
-Shave my head at least once.
-Become a certified skydiving instructor.
-Spend around five years of my life in Spain, learning Spanish and Flamenco.

Et cetera.

We arrived in Granada after dark, hungry, and without a map, but managed to arrive at our hostel safely after only a bit of aimless wandering and several confused calls to the hostel reception man, who spoke no English whatsoever (later, we found out that he spoke excellent French, but for now we'll focus on the fact that my high school Spanish served me well enough to navigate unfamiliar streets with directions that I could barely hear over the phone. I was proud of myself.) Both of us still starving but completely unwilling to leave the hostel, we discovered the cute old Spanish man's French capacity in time to explain that we needed a huge vegetarian pizza delivered to the hostel STAT. We then retreated to our room for the night, and ate pizza while watching a combo of shoddy pop music videos and Arnold Schwarzenegger on our newfound luxury: television.

The next morning, we packed up our things, and dragged our bags through the city and up an enormous hill to find our place of lodging for the next night, a guesthouse on the outskirts of the city with a breathtaking view of the Alhambra on a neighboring hilltop. On the way to the guesthouse, we had another important alert: kitties! Of course, there seem to be more kitties on the loose in Spain in general than in the other places I've been, but Granada beats the pants off them all. There were at least ten cats down in small valley, sunbathing by a creek. Of course, this was a bigger deal for Jane than for me, as those of you who know Jane will no doubt have surmised, but still, it was hella cute. We took lots of pictures.

The guesthouse promised to be just what we were looking for: relaxed atmosphere, amazing view, good food, and... a puppy. A very cute baby bulldog puppy, who was very spastic and likes to poop on the floor and bite dangly things, like my earrings. I had some good quality snuggling time with him, which was nice. I miss my dog so much!

Anyway, more about the hostel later. It was still really cold and a little drizzly, but Jane and I had tickets for the Alhambra gardens that day (the interior of the Alhambra, unfortunately, was booked up). The gardens were beautiful, and we did our best to give them a thorough tour, but eventually even our pashminas wrapped around us (Virgin Mary style) couldn't keep us warm, and we departed to get some café con leche and Manchego cheese tapas. After that, we headed back to the hostel, where I had more snuggle time with said puppy before lasagna was served for dinner. Dinner was excellent, the company was varied and fun, and after dinner they put on some music and we all got up and started dancing. That was all fine and dandy, up until about 2 in the morning. No one was taking care of the puppy, and it quickly became apparent to me that all the loud noise was making him really neurotic, so I decided to go sit out on the porch with him and let him sleep on my lap, wrapped up in my scarf. After a while, Jane and I decided to go to bed, and since I didn't see anyone else willing to hold the sleeping dog, I took him to bed with me, where he promptly peed on my sheets. By this time, I was already getting annoyed, but I stripped the sheets and tried to go to sleep anyway. This proved ineffectual for several reasons: 1) The puppy would not stop wiggling around and attempting to chew on various parts of my face; 2) The puppy's breath smelled like ripe urine; and 3) The club jams in the dining room continued at a deafening volume until 7 in the morning. This was not the relaxed stay that Jane and I were looking for. We had been planning on getting up at 7 to go wait in line for tickets to the Alhambra, but when 7 rolled around, neither of us had gotten any sleep, and both of us were rather grumpy. We elected to sleep in instead, skip the Alhambra, and wander around El Albayzín (Granada's preserved historical district, which retains the narrow streets and architecture from the Moorish period). It would have been nice to stay another day in Granada and see more of the city, as well as the Alhambra, but the only hostel available was the self-same guesthouse of the previous night, and nothing could induce me to stay there again, puppy or no puppy. We left Granada around 8 pm on a 10-hour overnight train to Barcelona.

Barcelona was still a little chilly, but sunny, and after dropping off our bags at our hostel, we wandered around a bit, and eventually ended up at La Sagrada Familia, the Catholic church designed in the 1880s by Antoni Gaudí, which isn't scheduled to be completed until 2026. The cranes amongst the spires took away from the majesty, but it was still really cool to see. We spent a while going up and down snail-spiral staircases, and it was really interesting to see a modern interpretation of the Church, rather than the pre-Victorian ones that I'm used to.

Sightseeing is hard work, so we treated ourselves to some delicious gelato and what ended up being some quite disgusting Japanese food. By that time, the day was turning into evening, so we elected to go back to the hostel and try to track down our elusive couchsurfing host for the next two days, and then get to bed early to recover from our (un)restful night on the train.

The next morning, we headed to Las Ramblas, the main drag in Barcelona, and walked down towards La Boquería, the large fruit-vegetable-and-other-edibles market. On the way, we passed more statue people (there for the tourists, of course), and saw the animal market on Las Ramblas, where all manner of small animals (bunnies, birds, turkeys, chickens, mice, turtles...) are sold. The animals were cute, but I felt sorry for them; so many of them were so clearly desperate to get out of their tiny cages, in which they no doubt would be kept couped up in all day. I don't approve.

The food market, however, was very entertaining; we got some delicious fresh blackberry juice and gourmet chocolates. We then did some window-shopping, wandered through the old Gothic quarter, and saw the famously burgundy Arc de Triomf, which was less burgundy than I wanted it to be, but still cool. Even though the day was cool, we bravely made our way to the beach, but it was too windy and chilly to even think about taking a dip. We ended up just walking for a bit and collecting cool shells, and then heading back to town to meet up with Paul, our couchsurfing host. He was very quiet, but very accomodating, and after talking a bit and dropping our bags, we went out in search of food, with the plan of meeting him at 11:00 to go to his favorite jazz club in the area, Jamboree. After dinner and more gelato, Jane and I wandered through what we had been told was the gay district of Barcelona, in search of a good bar, but were unsuccessful, for one of two possible reasons: 1) The internet lied to us; 2) 10:00 on a Monday night is not a popular time for partying in Barcelona. Regardless, we met up with Paul at the jazz club, which was both cheap and excellent. I had trouble getting into it at first, but either it got better later on, or I began to understand it more; either way, I ended up wanting it to go on forever. After the show, we were homeward bound.

Tuesday morning we hiked up towards the Park Güell, another of Gaudí's creations. The mosaic bench plaza was particularly impressive. Since we had gotten a late start, we didn't stay for very long, but just did a quick tour. Afterwards, Jane and I split up; since the day was so much nicer than before, I was determined to get back to the beach, and Jane was in the mood for some more wandering about the centre of town. This time, I went to the nudist beach a little further out of the city, where, I am sorry to say, the only naked people I spotted were overweight old men. The water was still too cold to swim, but I had a lovely, relaxing time sunbathing, and was amused by the two offers for massages that I got by Asian women marketing their skills (I presume).

When I got back to town, Jane and I found each other amidst a terrifying flurry of pigeons, got a bite to eat, and headed up to Montjuïc (translated from Catalan as either Hill of the Jews, or Hill of Jupiter). From there, we got an amazing view of the city, and saw the outside of the old Olympic stadium. We had intended to go to the Botanical Gardens on the hilltop, but they were closed by the time we arrived. After a delicious gourmet vegetarian dinner at an organic restaurant Jane found, we did a bit of bar-hopping, and had what I will discreetly refer to as a shit-ton of sangria. We slept well that night, and got up feeling slightly ill to say farewell to Paul and catch a bus to the airport for our flight to Paris.

Two bus rides and a rocky flight later, I arrived in Paris more than a little nauseous. After a baguette and some Orangina to quiet my stomach, we found our host in Paris, who was perfectly nice, but didn't seem to understand what Jane and I meant when we said we didn't feel well and just wanted to eat, get our laundry done, and relax for the rest of the night. His interpretation of "getting a quick bite to eat" was to take us on an extended train ride to the centre of town, where we wandered a bit before finding a shitty and expensive Italian place. Jane was starving, but by this time I was too nauseous to eat anything but a few crunchy breadsticks, so I made awkward conversation in equally awkward English (our host spoke English well, but his friend that soon joined us spoke it very painfully). I don't mean to jilt him for not being fluent in my native tongue; it's just that it make an awkward conversation even more awkward. The night ended with Jane developing a migraine, and us finally convincing Anthony (our host) that we needed to go back to his place and rest. Even then, he played club jams on the radio for about an hour before realizing that Jane was actually sick, and that all we needed was to go to bed. Finally, sleep.

The next morning, we felt much better, and with Anthony gone for work, Jane and I decided that it would be better to excuse ourselves from the situation as gracefully as possible, and get a hostel in the centre of town. Anthony clearly had quite extensive plans to take us around Paris, including a strenuous bike ride around Montmartre, that we honestly didn't have the energy for. Getting a hostel would allow us to explore Paris the relaxing way that we wanted to. With that decided, we went into town, had some crêpes for breakfast, took a walk along the Seine, and went into the Cathédrale Notre Dame (which was free), but didn't go up to the belltowers (which weren't free). We then went to Shakespeare and Company, one of the best bookstores I've ever been to, and wandered through the Latin district, where we had some delicious vegetable couscous for lunch. From there, Jane showed me around the outside of the Louvre and its adjoining park, but we didn't go in (see aforementioned statement that I am not a museum person). After all this, we went back to Anthony's apartment to tell him that we were still feeling sick, and didn't want to be an inconvenience to him. After making our excuses, we headed back to town and checked into our hostel, where we had a private room, thank the lord. After some cheap and delicious Indian food for dinner, we attempted to party it up in the Paris gay quarter, but were again unsuccessful. We found a few places that looked like they would have been more hopping on other nights, but Thursday is apparently not a big party night. We did, however, have some very entertaining conversation with some older lesbians who told us all the best places to go on Friday. Sadly, I was feeling too tired to go out on Friday, and Jane was too tired on Saturday, so we didn't end up partying too much.

Friday morning, we went to the Sexodrome, Paris' biggest sex store, and walked up to the top of Montmartre, making a short pit stop in Cafe des 2 Moulins, the coffee shop where Amélie was filmed. At the top, Jane was very patient while I browsed the many caricaturists at the plaza, and we then went into La Basilique du Sacré-Cœur (Basilica of the Sacred Heart), which I'm afraid would have been far more impressive if I hadn't seen the Cathédrale Notre Dame first. We meandered through a garden on our way down, and I had just enough time to snap a picture of the carousel from Amélie before we were surrounded by 4-5 men trying to hit on us and scam us by selling us their bracelets at the same time. We had to make a run for it, and that was the last I saw of Montmartre. We spent some time in what seemed to be the fabric/knitting/bellydancing district of Paris--clearly designed explicitly with me and Jane in mind. I could have spent hours browsing the elaborate and shiny fabrics, were it not for the overly aggressive salespeople. As it was, we probably spent under an hour in the district, before going back to town, finding Jane's saxophonist-busker-friend, and getting more Indian food for dinner.

Saturday, transfered to a new hostel, which felt strangely like a hotel but was only €20 each for the night. Then, we went to Paris' huge fleamarket, which was amazing, once we got past the several layers of fake designer clothes and D&G watches. We spent nearly two hours browsing the antique section of the market, and came out feeling happily dusty, with some semi-old French stamp collections. After that, I think we went back to the Latin quarter, and I tried lavender-flavored gelato, which tasted more artificial than I would have liked. Dinner that night, as far as I remember, consisted of nothing more than a few cookies and quite a few french fries from a nearby kebap stand.

Sunday morning, we checked out, and made our way to the Cimetière du Père Lachaise with some cheap lipstick, to kiss Oscar Wilde's grave. I was expecting there to be quite a few red kisses already there, but I was shocked by the shear quantity. The tombstone and sculpture were almost completely covered with lipstick marks. Jane and I had trouble finding a bare place to plant our own kisses, but our mission was soon accomplished, and we left the lipstick there for others of a similar mind. After my final crêpe (delicious applesauce), Jane and I parted at the metro, Jane towards art-museum-land, and I towards the international bus station, to get my bus back to London.

The end. Many congratulations to anyone who has managed to make it this far. Later, there will be pictures, but I don't have the energy right now.

Thursday, 3 April 2008

done done done done and done!!!!!!

I spent all day at the library again today, and now four shiny papers are lying complete on my shelf, waiting to be turned in April 21. Now all I have to do is stuff enough clothes in my backpack to convince the Spaniards that I'm not a bum, wash my dishes, eat up all the ripe bananas I've got floating around the room, and get to bed in time to not oversleep my flight to Madrid tomorrow morning.

OH. AND NOT FORGET MY BIKINI, 'CUS I'M FINALLY GONNA SEE A REAL, SUNNY MEDITERRANEAN BEACH!!!

I'm excited. Can you tell?

I'll be back April 19th or 20th, so you'll hear more from me then. For now, chao, loves!

Tuesday, 1 April 2008

Life, in general.

Last week, I witnessed my first thunder-hailstorm, which was also the first time I've seen the ground in London turn white, since snow never sticks around here. Today, it feels like high spring. The sun was out, and Archbishops park (right behind my dorm) smelled like flowers. I spent most of the day in the college library, doing more research about those godforsaken Victorian authors, but I relished the 45-minute walk back home, just as the sun was going down, and it was beginning to feel like a summer night--cool and breezy, with the promise of warmth in the morning.

I'm starting to feel the end-of-the-school-year high I get every spring, when I still have one last crunch to go, but the end is in sight, and DAMN, is it a good end this year. Friday, I leave for Madrid with Nora, and then continue on to Granada, Sevilla, Barcelona, and PARIS (!!!) with Jane, arriving back in London on April 20th (hopefully), just in time to turn in my papers. Then, my family (minus Dad) comes to visit! I can't wait to take my bro pubbing.

I was a naughty child and didn't finish all my papers before taking off for a long weekend, so I still have one 4000-word paper left to go, but hell, even staying up all night researching sounds like fun at this point.

In other news, I got back from a weekend trip to Amsterdam late Sunday night. This wasn't the proposed trip to Amsterdam/Prague/Berlin with Angela, which turned out to be too much of a time and money crunch for me, but rather a short trip with Nora and her flatmates. Apart from the grueling 10-hour bus ride there and back, the weekend was ridiculously relaxing. Amsterdam is definitely the friendliest big city I've been to, which was refreshing. London is anything but friendly, in general. We enjoyed the hazy coffee shops, got lost on a random tram to the edge of the city, wandered around the endless bridges and canals, went to the Sex Museum, went to the famous flower market, peeked into the red light district, and went to the Anne Frank Museum, which was definitely a sobering experience. Sadly, for some reason, I didn't have the presence of mind to take as thorough an assortment of pictures as I usually have after my weekend trips, so you'll have to make do with just a few.

Pictures of Amsterdam.


Tiny cacti at the flower market.


More tulips than you could ever want.


Pot lollipops at the flower market.


Holy Mother of Cheese. Please note the multi-lingual "cheese" sign by the door. It's good to know that they don't discriminate against Spanish tourists who want to get them some (traditional?) Holland cheese.


I was tempted to buy some of these, despite the obvious hokey-ness, but Nora's disapproving looks saved me from such a fate.
They also had fuzzy neon-colored slipper clogs.


Pretty, yes?


The National Monument. Emphatically NOT phallic. Not a bit.


Nora and I outside the Amsterdam Sex Museum.


Chastity belts! From the Sex Museum.


The pretty, idyllic side of Amsterdam.

Tuesday, 18 March 2008

Bath, etc.

Not much has changed since my last post, but I feel obliged to talk a bit about my trip to Bath. It rained most of the time, which was a bummer, but the city was pretty, if posh, and our couchsurfing host was helpful and friendly. There was another guy couchsurfing that night; he was seventeen years old and his name was Owen, which was weird. (For those who don't know, Owen is my newly-turned-eighteen younger brother.) Owen seems to be a more common name here, though, than in America, so maybe it's not that weird.

Anyway, we took a tour of the town, went into the old Roman public baths, drank two glasses of mineral water from the hot springs, ate some delicious cornish pasties, went to the Fashion Museum and the Jane Austen Museum, explored the park, toured a fully restored and authentic Georgian house, saw the River Avon (which is not the same as Shakespeare's River Avon).... et cetera. Pictures are up here.

Overall, the trip was pretty fun. Unfortunately, we were really tired on Sunday and wanted to head back early, and our couchsurfing host told us that if we pretended to be asleep on the train the conductor wouldn't be allowed to wake us up to check our tickets. This proved false, and I had to pay £40 for a new ticket. Thus, I am even shorter on money than I expected to be, but perhaps this is a lesson to me for cutting it too close. I get my loan money soon, and I still haven't decided what I'm doing over break.

Papers are dragging. I can't seem to keep myself motivated. Advice, anyone?

Thursday, 13 March 2008

The end is in sight.

Of classes, that is. Not of my time in London / the United Kingdom / the Continent. I only have one week of classes left, which means end-of-term papers are the order of the day. I have four 4000-word papers, all due on April 21, and I'm still hoping to get all of them done by the end of next week, so that I won't have to worry about them over Easter break.

Paper topics are as follows:
1. How Freud's definition(s) of the Oedipus complex can deepen our understanding of Hamlet.
2. How 'closure' functions as a stabilizer of gender norms in Twelfth Night and Gallathea.
3. How Shakespeare uses societal portrayals of the womb to redeem the scapegoat and condemn society in Othello, The Winter's Tale, and Coriolanus.
4. How the topic of childhood trauma is treated in David Copperfield and Silas Marner (and possibly a bit of Wordsworth's The Prelude).

…so, I told you my semester revolved around Shakespeare and Freud, right? No comment.

Anyway, speaking of break, I'm having a bit of a dilemma trying to figure out what exactly I'll be doing for the 30 days after classes end, before I have to be back in London to turn in my papers and meet my family for their holiday. My original plan was to fly with Nora and Jane to Stockholm for Easter weekend, then to meet up with Angela in Amsterdam, accompany her on her travels to Prague and Berlin, and then follow her back to Switzerland for a few days before heading to Madrid to meet Jane once more. We wanted to spend a few days each in Madrid, Granada, Sevilla, and Barcelona, and then fly to Paris for a few days before Jane went back to Aix, and I took a train to meet Angela in Bourges to finish up with a Gogol Bordello concert. That would put me at April 20th, at which point the time has come to fly back to London and turn in the papers that, with any luck, will be sitting in a neat pile on my desk by next Friday.

Sounds baller, right? Here's the problem: both Chase and U-M have screwed up a bit in the processing of my loan, the end result of which is that I won't receive the money until next Friday, leaving me very little time to buy tickets and make plans. I'm pretty sure that the plans for Spain are cementing themselves (though Jane is now thinking she might want to go to Rome instead of Paris), but I don't know if I'll be able to make the other things happen. And, after all, if I can't get my papers done in time, I might have to spend a bit more time in London working before heading out. I'm sure it will work out, but I'm stressing a bit at the moment.

On another note, Nora and I are taking a trip to Bath this Saturday/Sunday, and couchsurfing again, so that should be awesome. I've wanted to go to Bath for a while. Pictures next week!

xoxo.

Friday, 29 February 2008

I'm a nerd.

"Outside, everything has opened up. Winter clear-cuts and reseeds the easy way. Everywhere paths unclog… The woods are acres of sticks… When the leaves fall the striptease is over; things stand mute and revealed. Everywhere skies extend, vistas deepen, walls become windows, doors open… All that summer conceals, winter reveals…

It is winter proper; the cold weather, such as it is, has come to stay. I bloom indoors in the winter like a forced forsythia; I come in to come out. At night I read and write, and things I have never understood become clear; I reap the harvest of the year's planting." --Annie Dillard

Some of you, I'm sure, have had this quote forced down your throats before, since I love it so much. But I couldn't resist posting it. I miss nature; I miss wilderness backpacking. If anything, seeing the Highland mountains made me realize just how much I've missed it over the past six or so months. You can get anything in London--except mountains. The city is so bloody flat. I used to think I would love living in a big city, like New York or London. But living here has taught me otherwise.

I sound like I'm complaining. I don't mean to complain. London is amazing; I'm glad I decided to come here for the year. But I could never, ever live here permanently. I ache for countryside.



View of the London skyline from my window at sunset. Jane, words cannot describe how jealous I am of your mountain view in Aix right now.

Wednesday, 27 February 2008

Oh, right, and there was also an earthquake last night...

... but I slept through it, so it's all good. :)

A wee trip to Scotland!

I got up at 4 last Wednesday morning, and not just because I'm masochistic! Nora and I were scheduled to take an 8:40 flight out of London Stansted into Glasgow, before which we had to get to Victoria train station and take a 1.5 hour bus to the airport. We planned to leave on the 5:40 bus, but Fate had other plans: namely, that Nora would oversleep (hey! oversleeping is supposed to be my job!), wake up when I called at 5:20, and haul ass to the bus station just in time to miss the 6:00 bus. At 6:30, we were finally on our way, and made it to the airport just before the check-in closed. Needless to say, when we arrived in Glasgow we were both exhausted, neither of us having got very much sleep the night before. We did a bit of exploring around the city, which very much retains the look of Victorian Gothic, saw Glasgow Cathedral, ate at a wee curry shop, went into our first kiltmaker's shop, had some delicious afternoon tea... and then called the people we were couchsurfing with that night. I think we originally planned to go out and experience the Glasgow nightlife, which has an amazing reputation, but when we got to our host's house we were both exhausted and coming down with colds, and we ended up just talking to Laura and Alex (who were both very friendly, well-travelled, and easygoing--a great experience for our first try at couchsurfing) for a few hours, having tea and dinner, and then going to bed.

Photos of Glasgow here.

We got up around 7:00 Thursday morning, said goodbye to our hosts, bought some decongestant medication, and headed to the station for our train to Edinburgh. When we arrived, our new host (Kim) picked us up from the station and we walked to her house, where we had tea (again), and went out to explore. We started by walking up the Royal Mile to Edinburgh Castle, which we took pictures of but did not enter because of its £12 entry fee. We then started making our way back down the hill, went to a kiltmaking exhibition, and explored a few more kilt shops and tiny alleyways leading off the main road. After a cheap hot lunch at a nearby diner, we got ambitious and decided to climb to the top of Arthur's Seat, the biggest hill in the vicinity, from which you can see most of the city and the seacoast. Sounds brilliant, right? Except as we climbed, the winds kept on getting worse, and as soon as we rounded the corner of the summit, we were literally flattened against the side of the hill. We could barely move, and tried sitting there for a while until the wind let up... but it didn't, so we eventually had to convince ourselves to move back the way we came. Our mouths were being forced open by the wind (but I could barely breath), and dirt was blowing in our faces. Normally, I love storms and high winds, but that was the first time I've actually been scared of them. I quite literally felt like I might be blown off the edge at more than one point. We found out the next morning that the winds had been the beginning of a huge Atlantic storm that was blowing in even as we arrived to Edinburgh.

When we got down, both of us were really shaken, so we went to the first pub we could find, to clean the dirt out of our ears and have a hot toddy (hot water, whiskey, honey, cinnamon, and lemon), which, by the way, was delicious. After relaxing for a good long while and letting ourselves warm up, we found our way back to our host's apartment. There, we ate our cheap dinner and met the other people who would be staying with us--Kim's boyfriend, Ivan, and Josh, their friend from London. We relaxed and chatted for a while, and drank a bit of cider before we all headed off to a nearby pub where there was the promise of live folk music. The music was great--there was a middle-aged man who played the guitar and sang sad melodies in a raspy voice, as well as one of the best fiddlers that I have ever heard. But soon, the fun started. Kim, it became clear, was drunk out of her mind, as evidenced when she began crawling around on the floor with one of the customer's dogs, and attempted to steal a hat off of another customer. Ivan led us home pretty quickly after that, but unfortunately, by this time, both our hosts were too drunk to recognize the implications of the fact that we had to get up at 8:00 the next morning, and proceeded to put on an awful Jean-Claude Van Damme movie. Nora attempted to give them the hint by laying down on the floor and attempting to sleep, but (again) they were too drunk to notice. Kim fell asleep sitting up on the couch, and Ivan dozed just enough to look like he was sleeping, but not enough to allow the movie to be turned off (as Josh, bless his soul, tried to do more than once for our benefit). I soon dozed off too, but awoke to find myself being kicked off the couch by Kim, who, once I vacated, became convinced that the hood of the sweater I was wearing was her blanket, and quite determinedly tried to yank it off me. Finally, Josh managed to convince Ivan that Kim needed to be taken to bed, at which point he helped me to set up the couch/bed, and Nora and I finally got to sleep (at somewhere between 3 and 4 in the morning). I was only woken up once by Ivan exclaiming how brilliant Van Damme's dialogue was.

Pictures of Edinburgh here.

Next morning, we left on our Haggis bus tour, and went to Stirling, where we climbed up to the Wallace Monument and saw the Banoch Burn battlefield. From there, we went up to Loch Lubnaig, then to Glencoe, and ended up at the Isle of Skye at the end of the day, where we stayed in Saucy Mary's hostel (named after a Viking princess who used to flash her tits before a ferry crossing for good luck). The weather was horrendous, but the scenery was beautiful anyway, and we did get a few flashes of sun. Anyway, I'm kind of glad we got to see Scotland rough and wild, rather than sunny and idyllic.

My bed that night could not have been warmer or cozier, and it was up at 8:00 again the next morning. We headed north to the tip of the Isle, and as we passed the mountains our bus driver told us the legends behind their formations. We stopped to take a drink from a mountain stream said to heal every broken heart, and got soaked and muddy climbing over fences and "do not enter" signs to get to the ruins of an old MacDonald castle. On the way off the island, our driver collected £1 from each of us to buy whiskey and some Scottish shortbread, and a couple of our fellow tourists went stumbling down the bus pouring us each our share. A bit of whiskey and more than a few Michael Jackson songs later, we were at Loch Ness, which I think might have been more impressive if I wasn't so used to the size of Lake Michigan. That night, we went to a demonstration of traditional Highland life and dress, where we learned that Highlanders used to soak their clothes in pee to rid them of lice, and that because living conditions were so terrible, men came to view dying in battle as the best way to go (rather than gangreen, tuberculosis, etc.). I think the life expectancy was around 38 for men, and somewhere in the 40s for women.

Later, our guide convinced the owner of a nearby pub to play the bagpipes for us, after which it was my great joy to witness the large group of obnoxious Americans travelling with us attempt to make the instrument squeal. Much horrible kareoke followed.

Sunday morning, up at 8:00. We explored Loch Ness a bit more, and went tacky souvenir hunting, before driving down to Culloden, and the battlefield there. While most of the tour went into the historic exhibit there, Tony (our bus driver) told us the story of the battle, and I walked around the battlefield, where the graves of the fallen clansmen are marked with stones--even a stone for Clan Campbell, who fought on the English side. Afterwards, we went to an ancient graveyard of standing stones nearby (like Stonehenge, except free, and you can still dance naked around these ones if you want), and then to the Tipsy Laird for lunch, where most of the group (including Nora) tried Haggis. I didn't try it, and from what I've heard, I'm glad I didn't, because I probably would have thrown up.

After that, we pretty much just high-tailed it back to Edinburgh, since we were running late. We got back to the city just before 6:00, and said our sad goodbyes and exchanged a few names and numbers with fellow Londoners, before having a traditional Scottish dinner at Pizza Hut and chilling in a pub until we had to get to the station again, this time for a 9-hour overnight bus back to London.

Pictures of the Highlands here and here.

Now, normalcy (and classes) have resumed. I seem to have spent nearly all of my money on train tickets, so now I'm on rations of pasta and rice until I get my loan money, but it was worth it, I think. Toodles, and enjoy the pictures.

Wednesday, 13 February 2008

Pictures of Hampstead...

Now available here.

Crap! I'm failing in my resolution to update more often.

I'm in the middle of my winter term 'reading week', which means I'm already half-way done with this semester. It's gone really fast. Lit. and Psychoanalysis is loads of fun, even if the professor is a bit scary. Last week we talked about birth anxiety and the Oedipus complex in Alice in Wonderland. Fun, fun. Early Modern Sexualities is fascinating, because well, let's face it--we all know how obsessed I am with sexuality. We've spent two weeks analysing interpretations of incest, one on rape, and next week we're moving on to homoerotic desire. Shakespeare is great, even if I'm starting to feel like there's a pattern I can recognise in all his plays, and maybe they're not so original after all. Deep down, I know that's not true, because there's so much in his writing that's below the surface; I think it was just a bad idea to take two Shakespeare classes in succession. I shouldn't be surprised that I'm getting sick of it. My final class, Memory & Time in the 19th Cent., is doing pretty well for itself. Sometimes it gets a bit philosophical for my taste, but it's definitely helped me rediscover my love for Dickens and the Victorians in general.

Last weekend was a busy one. Nora and I left on Friday morning on a train for Oxford, which we spent all day exploring before bunking down in a hostel that night and heading on to Cambridge early Saturday morning. Both towns have their charms. I think I liked Oxford better, but I'm not sure if that would be different if I had seen Cambridge first. I have to give Nora credit for coming up with the perfect way to describe both: Oxford is 'classic', while Cambridge is 'quaint'. The architecture is beautiful, the Rivers Isis and Cam are gorgeous, and the historic pubs are... cramped. But cozy, and very awesome.

Photos of Oxford here and here. Photos of Cambridge here.

We were both very tired after two days of intense sightseeing, so we left Cambridge a little earlier than planned Saturday night. Sunday was a not-to-be-missed Scientology protest over on Victoria Embankment, complete with nerds in Guy Fawkes masks making fun of the 'church' across the street, and one awesome dude wearing a horse mask and playing 'Somewhere over the Rainbow' on his ukelele. Photos here.

I didn't spend long at the protest before heading to Trafalgar Square and Chinatown for the Chinese New Year celebration. Fireworks were going off every hour in Leicester Square, and the stage at Trafalgar had nearly continuous martial arts and opera/dance performances going on. Sadly, I didn't get up early enough to catch the lion dance/parade, but it was still pretty awesome. Trying to get through Chinatown to get something to eat was an adventure. At times the crowd would just stand completely still, everyone jam-packed in, and no one able to move an inch in any direction. This did wonders for my claustrophobia, of course. :) I don't think I've ever been somewhere so crowded. I can only imagine what the New Year must have been like in Beijing. Photos here.

I was sad to find out, upon returning home Sunday, that a large section of Camden Market had burned down on Saturday night. For those of you who haven't heard me rant about how much I love Camden market, I LOVE CAMDEN MARKET. It has such a collection of weirdos, cheap goods, illegal drugs, punk-rockers, crepe-stands, shady produce, and bad moroccan food, as I have seen anywhere. I don't think they know how the fire started, but I'm pretty sure no one was hurt. A large portion of the busiest part of the market was completely destroyed, however. I made a trip there on Monday to survey the damage, and was happy to see that many of the market stalls were still up and running. When I got to the damaged part, though, I felt like I'd lost a friend. The brick walls bordering the market were scorched black in parts, and there was a whole open area where construction workers were busy removing the refuse. The blaze must have been enormous. Photos here.

For most of my break, I've been doing a lot of relaxing and a little bit of reading. Today, though, I went to explore Hampstead, a picturesque area on the outskirts of London, former home of John Keats, H.G. Wells, Robert Louis Stevenson, Lord Byron, William Blake, J.M. Barrie (creator of Peter Pan)... and plently of other authors that I couldn't wait to get my nerdy hands on. I got to see Keats' old house, the overgrown graveyard where the
Llewelyn Davies family (inspiration for Peter Pan) was buried, the 18th century pub where highwaymen used to hang around before holding up travellers... Not to mention the old hospital now converted into luxury apartments where Scary and Baby Spice are currently living. I didn't have much time to explore Hampstead Heath before sundown, but I did manage to take a nice walk through a corner of it. It's lovely, a complete wilderness, nice and muddy and deserted. It was a really nice change from central London. I don't have pictures yet, but I'll post them in the next couple of days.

The last week or so, I've been working with my dad to take out another loan to fund my travels over here, since money has been running out rather quickly over the past months. London has turned out to be quite the financial committment for me. But, I've decided that I would rather make the most of my time here and pay it off after graduation, rather than staying in London doing basically nothing but studying for the rest of the term.

Plans are in the works for Nora and I to take a trip to Scotland (Glasgow, then Edinburgh, followed by a guided tour of the Highlands), leaving next Wednesday. I'll be sure to update to let you know how that goes, but for now, since I don't have any papers due for midterms this time around, I'm merely off for some more relaxation. Cheers!

Tuesday, 29 January 2008

Things I have learned in the past week or so:

1. I love English hard cider. Especially Old Rosie's Crumpy Scrumpy Premium Cider.

2. Casanova lived in an apartment in the south-east corner of Soho Square.

3. The reason I am late to my Psychoanalysis seminar every week is, apparently, that lateness is Oedipal, stemming from the desire not to fit in.

4. The combination of puppets, relationship issues, and a little bit of porn will always result in pure hilarity (I saw Avenue Q). :)

5. You will never know how creepy The Tempest can truly be until you see it acted with sinister music and strobe lights.

6. All British people are perpetual drunkards. Well, maybe not all. But most. I already knew this, of course, but it bears refreshing.

7. It doesn't matter how comfortable your shoes are--if you go dancing for 4 hours, your feet will always be bleeding by the end of it.

That's all for now. I'd try to think of more, but I'd rather sleep. Goodnight, then. ;*

Wednesday, 23 January 2008

God-DAMN, it's been a long time since I've updated.

A lot's happened since December 7. I'm back in London, of course. My Christmas break was lovely; it was relaxing and comforting to be home again, if not much of an adventure.

Unfortunately, as those of you familiar with my study habits will no doubt think typical, I failed to get any studying or writing done for my January end-of-term papers/exams. Thus, after my arrival back at Brian Creamer House on Jan. 3, I went through another week of stress and sleep-deprivation, the results of which were several: 1. Both of my papers were turned in on time, 1 brilliant, 1 mediocre; 2. I more or less aced my Shakespeare exam; and 3. After studying all night and laying down for a short "nap," I overslept my 2:30 Irish Lit. exam. Many hysterics ensued when I awoke and was informed that my only option was to fail the class, but it turns out that if you cry enough on the phone with the departmant chairman, anything is possible. By some strange bending of the rules, and by portraying myself as a poor, lost study-abroad student, I managed to retake the exam. With any luck, I'll have aced that one too.

New classes are well underway, and they are as follows:

Memory & Time in the 19th Century
Early Modern Sexualities
Jacobean Shakespeare
Literature & Psychoanalysis

Thus far, all of them are interesting, though I have far less of a range of time-periods than I had last term. Discussions of Shakespeare, Freud, or both promise to dominate the semester, since they have managed to intrude even into the courses where I didn't expect them, but I suppose I can deal with that. Yesterday, we discussed the Oedipal complex as shown in the phallic objects (lightsabers, wands, etc.) in Star Wars and Harry Potter, which was amusing, to say the least.

London weather has been wonderful after remembering Michigan winters. Still rainy, of course, but I've always liked rain. And, another change... Nora's here (love you, babe!)

I've been feeling like I've been getting too wrapped up in my books, and not making the most of my time here, but I'm hoping to get out a bit more this semester. Seven out of my eight classes are on Monday and Tuesday, with the remaining discussion on Thursday, which means I have a 3-day weekend, which can be turned into a 5-day weekend by skipping only one class. I hope to take advantage of this arrangement and take a few trips to Scotland and Ireland, and I'm starting to think about going to southern Spain and/or Morocco for my spring break. I want to go clubbing/pubbing more, see more shows, visit more museums and markets.... Anyway, we'll see, I suppose. I'm probably vastly overreaching my budget already. :)

That's all for now, since I've got to read the entirety of Confessions of an English Opium-Eater yet tonight, but I promise I'll start updating more frequently in the future. Later, loves.