Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Spain

Hola from Spain!

AHHH LAST COUNTRY! Shortest blog post ever, ready go. Nothing to do in Cadiz, day 2 we trained over to Seville and have been here for 3 days. We went to the cathedral and climbed the bell tower, we have done lots of shopping, and lots of eating. Met up with SAS friends and every minute is a good one. I'm with Kat, Mere and Linz and I love travelling with them! Lots of funny moments. We're on a mission to do all these things last minute now and make it back to the boat. I cannot believe this trip is almost over. Really, what??? Anyway I love Spain, wish I knew more Spanish, and yeah, I will definitely be back.

Gotta run,

Love,
Hilary

Croatia

Bog from Croatia!

Another country down and only one more to go! Everybody is a strange combination of excited to go home and sad to be leaving all these fun adventures behind. People are in the best mopey mood possible. So what happened in Croatia…?

When we arrived in Dubrovnik it was freezing cold and rainy. It kind of felt like home. Croatia is a beautiful touristy country for about 10 months out of the year…and November is just not one of those months. All the exciting things to do were closed for the season or open and ridiculously expensive…there was nothing to do. For most SASsers, this meant getting completely trashed in the middle of the afternoon and taking over the old walled city. For my friends and myself, this meant finding an internet café and tourist agencies to plan out the rest of our trip in Croatia. Even the tourist agencies told us that there was literally nothing to do – a lot of help they were! So we decided to go to Split, and found a sweet looking hostel that boasted free internet for $20/night/person. We slept on the ship the first night and got up to take a 6 30 AM bus to Split. That was kind of exciting because we got to pass through Bosnia! Check off one more country I can say I’ve been to…and then 4 ½ hours later we arrived.

Once in Split we had to first find our hostel because we were carrying all of our bags. For me this means stuff was heavy because I’d brought my computer and schoolwork. The hostel was amazingly close to the bus station, and it was bigger and cleaner and more perfect than I could have imagined! Western toilets, a kitchen, 2 TVs with DVD players, 3 computers, extra towels….it was wonderful. After dropping our stuff off, we wandered the streets and looked for another travel agency. We finally found one in Diocletian’s Palace and we were like, “just tell us what’s open, we don’t care what we do we just want to do SOMETHING!!!” and he was like, “well, you could go rafting but most people don’t do that in November.” “Is it open?” “Yeah…” “Ok, we’ll do it.”

Oh yeah, my group: I was with Mary, Allie, and Lisa (who is my new favorite person on this trip and I really wish we would have become friends in the first couple weeks instead of the last!!), and a slew of other people that formed our large blob of a group.

With rafting set up, we searched for food. We found a restaurant called the Black Cat that had been recommended to us. We ran into a group of about 8 SAS guys and they told us the restaurant was great and we told them we just signed up for rafting. This is the first country we’ve been in with NO water/health warnings…so we all ate SALADS!! And it was great. And we didn’t have to take pepto beforehand or anything! After dinner we decided to have a quiet girls’ night at the hostel. With free internet, I skyped and uploaded pictures and caught up with lots of people and also watched a movie with everybody. We then went to bed pretty early to get rested for our exciting day ahead.

The next morning we were up early and met our raft guides at 9 30 AM. The boys came rafting with us, and they were a fun, though extremely hung over, group. The car ride up to the river was about an hour, and I was in a car with Mary and Brett and our driver, Iban. Iban used to be a national rugby team player and had lots of funny stories to tell us. Finally we arrived at the river site. They loaded us up with wetsuits, wet socks, wet shoes, a jacket, a life jacket, and a helmet. There was a funny moment when Tristan put his wet suit on backwards and looked like a goof. Finally we were all bundled up and actually not too cold with all that stuff on. I was in a raft with Mary, Allie, Tristan, Zubin, and Peter (who I’d never met before that day) and Iban was our guide. The rafting experience was sooo cool!! The river wasn’t that difficult and part of the fun was just being so freaking cold. But it felt good to paddle and get a little exercise and Iban’s stories were hilarious and the boys were pretty amusing as well. We had to get out at this one part where people die a lot and walk around it. During that break, they fed us candy bars and bananas and then we got to watch our super star raft guides bring our rafts single handedly down this hard part of the river!!! They were awesome. Then we got back in and did the slightly more advanced part of the river (it wasn’t as hard or scary as I thought it would be). We practiced doing swirlies down the river and also rammed one of the other boats just for fun. Like bumper boats. Tristan and I were in the front for this portion of the river, and at this one part everybody was supposed to get splashed and just Tristan and I did…we got soaked!!! It was Cold. Iban was really good with giving us directions so that we felt like we knew what we were doing. Pretty soon we got to this miniature cliff and he asked if anybody wanted to jump off of it. Our whole plan for Croatia was to be extreme, so we were like…we have to. Most of the boys wussed out, Allie wanted to jump but needed some coaxing, and I definitely needed to be talked into it. Which is when Mary just stood up and was like, “I’m going.” And we were like, “What?!? Now we have to go.” So we climbed up this rock, it was probably only 10 feet high, maybe higher, I don’t know. Mary went first and jumped off like it was no big deal. Then a couple of the boys went and the guides did some neat jumpy tricks. Long story short, I JUMPED!!! It was sooo scary and being in the air was really exhilarating. I couldn’t believe I’d just cliff jumped in Croatia in November….Crazy. When I hit the water, for a split second I didn’t feel anything…and then it hit me. SO COLD!!!!!! I could hardly speak or move when I came up for air. I doggie paddled with all my gear on to the raft and the guys helped me over the side of a the raft…I felt like a dead fish being pulled up. Anyway, that was quite the exciting thing to do. When we got back to land it was a major production getting people back into dry clothes. Finally we were ready to go and headed back into Split, where we defaulted to the Black Cat again and got dinner. We made a grocery store stop on the way back to the hostel and once there watched movies and played card games and hung low until we decided to go out. We wandered the town at night for a while and ran into some other SASsers. It was really fun just being out and about with everybody and walking around the city even though it was freezing cold. Eventually we went to bed, ending a great day.

We had to check out by 10 AM, so we were up pretty early. We ate breakfast (at the Black Cat of course) and then did all of our little touristy shopping. I really wanted to buy a jacket but I couldn’t find any that fit me perfectly so I didn’t want to spend the money on one. Plus I still get complimented on a regular basis every time I wear the jacket Jon got me. So we wandered the town down by the water for a while and decided to go get things pierced. It ended up being way more expensive than necessary, so I didn’t get anything pierced but Allie got her eyebrow pierced. She wins the Extreme award. Her parents are not going to be happy! Hahaha. We took an afternoon bus back into Dubrovnik and got back at about 7 30 – which was too bad cuz that means we just missed free dinner on the ship. We napped and lazed around until about 10 and then Mary, Allie, Jesse and I got 10 PM snack (Pizza and/or burgers). After that we were all exhausted, and crashed.


The last day we took a quick bus ride from the ship to the Old Walled City and started off our day with a really good lunch. Then we did the Walled City tour (self-guided) and spent hours walking around on the walls. Every single view from the wall was gorgeous, so we walked really slowly and took lots of pictures and went all the way around and that was our main activity of the day. After the walls, and even though we were cold, we got ice cream and did some last minute shopping before heading back to the ship.

Being back on the ship on the last day of port is hard, because everybody is getting back and sending last minute postcards and excited about their trip, but then in the back of your head you’re like, “I have so much homework to do it’s not even funny. Do I go work or talk with all these excited people?!” Oh, also people were freaking out because we only have one more port left…which is weird.

So anyway, I spent the next 4 days on ship furiously trying to catch up on reading, writing my psych paper, dealing with leadership and actually going to global studies (which is more than most people can say). We had an auction the other night and people spend RIDICULOUS amounts of money on something that they would not even pay for if it wasn’t in the auction. I’m talking like $750 for a bubble bath on ship. $2000 for dinner for 2 on the 7th deck. WHAT?!?!? It was crazy. So that was weird. Oh also one of my professor’s step daughters is on the ship visiting from England. Her name is Sophie and she’s been hanging out with Mary and Jesse and I a lot so that’s really fun. The last pre-port meetings before Spain were kind of sad L We’re all into crunch-bonding-time now, so I’ve been having lots of good, fun conversations with lots of good people here. I really like a lot of the kids here and I think I will actually miss them. The next couple of weeks will be especially bittersweet. Also on the last day before Spain Lauren sat me down and made me watch Crash, which was an amazing movie! And other than that…not too much was happening on the ship. Everybody’s a weird combination of excited and mopey; so that’s a little bit strange to feel but completely expected.

More after Spain’s over.

Love,

Hilary

Friday, November 16, 2007

Turkey

I don’t know how to say Hello in Turkish.

I kind of wish they taught us more helpful phrases for the countries we visit…oh well. In Turkey I traveled with Ellen and her roommate Erica, Adam, Nate, and Bryce. Bryce goes to UW so I was glad he was on the trip. Adam and Nate did all the planning – so they’re champions, because they planned an amazing trip!

When we got off the boat we made our way via public transportation to the airport. We took a plane to a city in southwest Turkey called Antalya. From there we took taxis and busses to a smaller city called Olympos. Olympos has a population of about 200 people. In the summertime, this dream-world Mediterranean town gets about 2000 tourist visitors. So being there in November…means that it was a little bit colder, but we had the place virtually to ourselves! When we arrived it was dark and chilly, but we dropped our stuff down at our lodging (we rented out one tree house and one bungalow!) The difference between the tree house and the bungalow was that the tree house had no heating and you had to climb a few steps to get to the door. I stayed in the bungalow the first night and the tree house the second night. The people working at the resort place home cook all their food, they kind of take turns trying to outdo each other! Thus, our food was delicious and authentic and fully cooked (yay!) We had a yummy dinner and were pretty tired after traveling all day, but decided to go on an adventure! In the dark. We walked down some dark road towards the water, we kept passing by creepy ancient ruins and a dog found us and tagged along with us for the whole evening. Finally we made it to the water…it was gorgeous. The beach was covered in small pebbles, and out in the middle of nowhere there were no lights and no pollution to detract from the brilliant night sky. I saw more stars than I think I’ve ever seen. We saw shooting stars go across the black and it was outstandingly beautiful. We played the ha-ha game on the pebbles and finally us and the dog (Rabes, short for Rabies) headed back to base. We hung out in the lodge-esque building with a heater and cushions and had a relaxing evening.

The next day we got up and ate homemade breakfast (scrambled eggs, omelets, fried eggs with Greek olives, baguettes and cheese). Then we headed out for our sea kayaking adventure!!! We found a guide and went kayaking on the Mediterranean!! The temperature was about 75 degrees, unlike Istanbul which I think was cold and rainy (hah!) The water was clear blue and gorgeous!! Oh yeah, and warm…it was like pleasant bathwater. Adam flipped over in his kayak twice – which was hilarious both times. Bryce flipped over once. I didn’t get to enjoy the excitement of capsizing. We kayaked for a pretty long time and were all feeling it in our arms when we arrived at some sort of far off private beach. We played around in the sea for a little while and then headed back. After that we were all pretty tired. Back on shore we stopped by a little pancake place. This old woman who had only a very few teeth made us potato and cheese pancakes (and by pancake I basically mean a crepe). They were really good and we also had Turkish tea with them. It was awesome because it was a farm-type area so there were lots of chickens prancing about and…and bunny rabbit!!!! I promptly named him Oreo, and for good reason. He was so cute. After that we were all exhausted!!! So we lounged around on the outside cushions and listened to music and napped until dinner time. Part of dinner was stuffed green peppers and it made me miss Mommy’s cooking a lot. After dinner we went on this amazing night hike tour!!! The hike was harder than I expected, but after about 20 minutes we arrived…at this hill…where there are natural pockets in the earth’s crust where methane comes out and is burned. Naturally. Like the eternal flame of life. It was SO freaking cool!!!!! The whole hill side just had little flares popping out of it…so weird. It was amazing. After that we were even more tired and lounged around until it was bedtime.

Alright day 3…we ate breakfast again and used the internet for a little while. Then we went on a self-guided hike through the ancient roman ruins that were, you know, just laying around. We found a roman bath, a roman amphitheatre, a church, a castle, a sarcophagus, some tombs, and some other random old things! It’s crazy just walking around like normal…through ancient ruins. Bizarre. This whole experience is surreal, it’s like we’re all constantly dream walking through some fake fantasy life going, “are we really here? Is this really happening? We’re in Turkey?!?!” We climbed to the top of something and were rewarded by the most amazing, beautiful, gorgeous, stunning, picturesque view EVER!!! We went on a picture taking frenzy and could probably get rich off of making postcards out of them. We could see the blue water and the pebbly beach and paragliders and the rocks and trees and ruins and everything!! Then we walked around on the beach, looking at / collecting cool rocks, the boys did some small scale cliff jumping while the girls took a little model photo shoot on the beach J Then we headed back for lunch. After lunch we took a bus to another bus that took us back to Antalya. Then we took another bus, this one was one of the worst bus rides of my life I think (it was crowded and smelly and we had no idea where to get off and ended up getting off way past where we needed to be…and it was just bad). After we back tracked to our hotel we found out that it was way more expensive than advertised online. So we only got one room and planned on all 6 of us crashing there. We went up and set our stuff down and then went out to dinner. After dinner we met some random guy that drove us all around the town and took us to clubs and hotels and it was so much fun. We just ran around everywhere and had a blast! Then we got back to the hotel and they knew our scheme…and made us pay for another room, so that was a huge bummer. Anyway we were slightly too exhausted to care so we paid for it and crashed.

The next morning, after not very much sleep, we got up, packed up and took a taxi to the airport. We flew back to Istanbul where it was rainy and not 75 degrees…boo. We got some food before heading back to the ship. It was so nice to get back and have free food and a sanitary shower (the hotel’s bathroom / everything was disgusting!!) Then I group hopped how I do and met up with Mary, Allie, and Jesse. We went to a hookah bar that had free wireless internet and I tried Turkish coffee. Nobody warned me about how freaking disgusting it is!!!!! EWW. Anyway internet was good, and after that I was ready for sleep.

The next day we got up early and after breakfast that same small group and I headed out for the Blue Mosque. It was big and beautiful and a mosque. I don’t know what else to say about it. Then we went to the palace and saw some sweet expensive looking ancient objects…thrones, jewelry, seals, goblets, knives, wedding headdresses, the works. It was gorgeous! Then we had our Turkish Bath experience!!! We were separated from Jesse and changed carefully into our towels. Then we were taken to a 300 year old communal bathroom and promptly had a woman remove all three of our towels. We sat down on warm tiles and the woman poured bowls of warm/hot water over us. Then one by one we were selected to go into a different room. In this room you lay spread eagle on a slab of marble. Another lady pours more water on you and then brings out the scrubby weapon. It was in between a loofa and the dishwashing sponge you use to get the hard stuff off of skillets. It was a little painful but so worth it. After it was all over I’d never felt so clean before in my life. They scrape LAYERS of dead skin off of you and you can see the black peeling off in clumps. It’s disgusting. After that this pillowy, silky thing washed over my body, no idea what it was other than Amazing. When I opened my eyes I was covered in millions of bubbles. It was like being in a bubble bath without the … bath. They soaped us and massaged us and washed our hair. Then they rinsed us all off and sent us back to the first room where we continued to pour bowls of water over ourselves. Then they wrapped each of us in three towels each and we met up with Jesse and the guys that happened to also be in his bath. We all sipped on apple tea and rejoiced in our cleanliness and finally put our clothes back on. From there we got chicken pitas for lunch and then temporarily separated. I went to go see the cistern (ancient water reservoir for the city…amazing). Then I met back up with them and we wandered the streets and bought fun things. I headed back to the ship with Allie and another girl, Kendra. We grabbed our computers and went back to the internet café. We drank more apple tea (it’s huge here) and skyped and interneted. I made it back to the ship with only 10 minutes to spare! It was a little nerve racking but not too much. I wrote some last minute postcards and then chatted with people and cram-read my politics book that I had to do a book report on.

Back on the ship…I spent the whole next day reading and sleeping and trying to write my stupid book report. I had to give a group presentation in my leadership class which went better than I thought it would. My part went really well – I didn’t talk too fast!!! And my professor really liked the examples I used and…yeah I felt really good about that, even though my group is like beyond dysfunctional. I don’t know how we pulled it off. Anyway. I eventually got my book report done, thanks to Joe who is smart and helped me. I went to bed late and got up early to finish it up and go to class. The good thing about that class period was that I got my last quiz back – which I somehow aced. I think he might be grading me easier than everybody else cuz I highly doubt I deserve perfect scores on anything politics related…yeah. Other than that things are fun on the ship. It was stormy and everybody felt sick that night. I’ve been hanging out with Mary a lot and very much enjoying her company. I might be traveling with Kat and Mere again in Spain so I’m pumped for that. Dave, my surrogate grandfather, is taking me out to formal dining, which is where you pay $25 to eat food significantly better than the normal ship food, and you have to dress up to go. So he is treating me and another girl he’s adopted on the ship and his wife is coming and we’re all SO excited!!! Also, the Ambassador’s Ball is coming up and I got my table figured out for that. It will be Ellen, Erica, and Nate (who I traveled with in Turkey) plus two other girls named Brittany and Stevie. That’s the night where everybody dresses up and everybody gets good food and then there’s some kind of dance afterward. Should be really high school-esque and fun. Other ship board news / drama, some kids did a variety of bad things and were supposed to get kicked off, but their rich parents called and got them to be allowed to stay. Captain Jeremy said no, I have final authority on this ship I want these idiot immature children off. ISE said, no, we’re vetoing your power as a CAPTAIN (you are NOT supposed to do that!!!!)….so after this Captain Jeremy will not be participating in Semester at Sea voyages. It’s really sad. He’s been with us for a while and done a ton of voyages. And those kids are just retarded. They wonder why they supposedly don’t get treated as adults…come on. A lot of people are pissed that they’re allowed to stay. Anyway drama drama drama, but I’m not a part of any of it. Life is good, I can’t believe how soon I’m coming home!!! I’m starting to have extremely mixed feelings about all of that…everybody’s shocked we only have 2 countries left…it’s weird.

Alright thanks for reading however much of this you did; take care!!

Love,

Hilary

Tuesday, November 6, 2007

Egypt + Photo Summary Thus Far

HAWAII: Mary and I splashing around on Waikiki Beach.








JAPAN: Lindsay, Katie, Jenna, Kat, me, Stevie, Ellen - in Nara at the Temple of the Great Buddha.







CHINA: At the Great Wall...duh.










CAMBODIA: At Angkor Wat!!








THAILAND: With BuBu, my elephant!!








INDIA: With the Indian girls I played basketball with!!








EGYPT: Of course, me on a camel wrapped in a turban-esque shawl in front of the pyramids at 6 30 AM.







SHIP LIFE: I see stuff like this every day...be jealous.









FRIENDS: Ally, Kendra, me, Mary, Jordan - some of the girls here that I like.











FAMILY: Surrogate grandfather, Dr. Dave Smith + me dressed like a hippie.







Salaam from Egypt!! Hope you enjoyed some of my favorite pictures from the voyage so far.

Man, we're going to be in Turkey in just a few hours - I'm so behind!!!!! AHHH. But I am caught up on my personal and politics journals, so that's good. But I also feel like I'm going to fail out of school. Honestly I don't know how they expect us to do everything. Anyway here is a super quick run down.

Everybody told us that Egypt was THE place to travel with a boy, with a group, etc. So two girls and I headed out by ourselves. We're all 20, Kat's from Chicago and Meredith's from Wisconsin. First day off the boat we paid $30 to get from Alexandria to Cairo, when it should have cost about $20 or less, and it took 6 hours instead of 2, but that's cool...Once in Cairo, we actually went to Giza and found a little three star hotel. That night we went to go see belly dancing and eat dinner on a Nile River cruise. We made our reservations on time (a huge feat given the cab drivers are INCOMPETENT) only to find that there was no belly dancing that night and also that the boat wasn't actually sailing that night and also that dinner was Chinese food...hahahah. "Adventure time!" is my motto. After dinner we crashed, because on Day 2....

We woke up at 345 AM, had coffee at 415, got to the pyramids at 5 30, and rode horses out to the pyramids to watch the sunrise. It was FABULOUS!!! So many beautiful pictures! We were all so tired and so excited. We rented horses and a man and just spent the morning out there by ourselves. We also hopped on a camel at some point, mostly just to take pictures. Then we went to a perfume shop where they make essences and that was fun. We took a cab to an area of town called Islamic Cairo. We explored on foot, shopped, bought postcards, went to the post office, went to travel agencies, and just kinda bummed around trying to figure out what to do. Our guide book was a useless piece of crap and quickly earned itself a bad nickname that was used constantly over the next 4 days. We finally found an internet cafe and crashed there for a couple hours. After that we were rejuvenated, it was better than a nap. We went to a restaurant and got some super authentic Egyptian food - we had NO idea what it was when we ordered it, but it was good! Yay for trying new things! Then we made our way to the Conrad Cairo and waited for an SAS trip to show up. We lounged around the five star lobby and ended up staying in that night, crashing on our friends' beds for free (illegally).

Day 3: Up and at it at 7 AM, we spontaneously decided to trek back up north to Rosetta, where the Rosetta stone was discovered. That was a little bit of a hassle, but we made it. We walked around that town, that was super cute and not touristy, before taking a boat ride down the Nile to go see a mosque. Then we ate lunch in an empty room on the 11th floor of the one hotel in Rosetta overlooking the entire city and river...gorgeous. Food took forever (hopefully not because they were killing an animal we just passed on the street, but possibly) and was kind of cold by the time it got to us. It was a good break to just sit and chat somewhere isolated and beautiful. After that we headed back to Alexandria. We used another internet cafe and then went shoe shopping (sucessfully!!!) before going back to the ship.

Day 4: We went and looked for cartouches (jewelry with your name on it in heiroglyphics) for Meredith. Then we tried to reserve a belly dancing show but somehow couldn't find ANY! Bummer. Then we went to the Alexandria Library which was nothing less than fabulous. It was truly amazing. There we met this girl named Walaa.......which led to the collective best day of our lives!! She wasn't busy so we invited her out to lunch. She paid for our transportation and took us around town before landing at a coffee shop with us. We must have been there for two hours just chatting and eating, it was a blast. She was 19 and we all got along great. Then she invited us to hang out with her family later that night...and we were like YEAH we wanna do that!!!! How cool will that be?? So after lunch we went grocery shopping and got some amazing ice cream, went back to the ship, dropped all our stuff off, and headed back to the library to meet up with her. Her dad was waiting for us, and drove Kat, Mere, Ellen, Lindsay, Walaa, and myself around all night. He bought us chocolate and sodas, got us through gates and guards to incredible photo-op places, took us to an Egyptian wedding parties, to the King's Palace, to a beautiful little bridge...just all over! Finally we got to a bike rental place...and he rented us all bikes!! So we rode bikes on the beach for about half an hour (on a cement board walk type thing)...and it was amazing, we were all just smiling and laughing non stop. Then we went back to her house/apartment. We met her two brothers and her two sisters, her mom and her dad's friend. We celebrated 7 year old Mohamed's birthday with the most luxurious cakes (yes, plural) you've ever seen. We danced all night to Arabic and American music. We talked about politics and ate fruit we'd never seen before. It was glorious. It was so hard to leave...but finally her dad DROVE us all the way back to the ship at 3 AM in the morning, so we arrived at 330 and he wouldn't let us pay for a thing. Back safe and sound, we were exhilirated and exhausted.

Day 5: Last day...we went to Pompey's Pillar first, which was awesome, and then walked to the Catacombs. Those tombs were AMAZING!!! So freaking cool / creepy / ancient...after that we went to a nice place for lunch and bought a ton of food. Good Egyptian food. Kabobs, chicken, cheese sambosas (SO GOOD, like fried raviolli), Egyptian rice, Puri bread, like 10 different sauces/dips/hummus things...it was a feast. And after that we got cappuccinos and some sort of doughnut-y with ice cream dessert. Then we headed to a shopping center to buy an Arabic music CD that Walaa recommended to us, and headed back to port. I wanted to find an internet cafe, so Mere and Kat went back to the ship and Jesse came exploring with me. There was one close to the port that was over crowded, over priced, and the internet kept crashing. I was like, no way, I know there's something else close by. I FOUND IT. Probably because I'm awesome. It was nearly empty, half the price (aka what it should be), and worked nearly perfectly. Actually the conversation went like this.

Me: Internet?
Boy: Yeah.
Me: How much?
Boy: (thinks) ... 5 pounds.
Me: No, 3.
Boy: No, 4.
Me: No, I did this yesterday for 3.
Boy: OK, 3.
AND THAT IS HOW I WIN AT LIFE.

And that pretty much sums up Egypt. Walaa and her family took the cake for being a part of my favorite day in port so far. I'm much less afraid of the middle east now and I would absoultely love to come back to Alexandria!! Now on to Turkey!

Love,
Hilary

Friday, October 26, 2007

India

Hello from India – where they have so many national languages that they didn’t teach us any helpful phrases, because English is becoming the way people communicate over here.

So India was great. Sorry, I’m so zapped from writing my personal journal and studying for tests that this blog seems to have fallen by the wayside. But I’ll try to catch you up a little bit.

In the words of my friend Adam, “India was dirty, nasty, smelly, disgusting, beautiful, awesome, and I can’t wait to go back.” That’s a pretty good summary. There are so many layers to India. I had a lot of great experiences and a lot of sad and frustrating experiences.

The first day I went to the American consulate office in India and that was … kind of boring in all honesty. It just wasn’t really what I wanted to be doing. That night my group trip left for our home stay. India is about as bad as China; and they’re main surface level similarities are that both countries have over a billion people living in them, but China is about the size of the US while India is about 1/3 of the size of the us, and also they both have massive pollution problems. So Chennai was truly filthy, and I’ve still got a cough from breathing in exhaust fumes rather than oxygen….

We took a sleeper train to Erode…it was uncomfortable to say the least. I was scared to sit in the train station, there was just dirt everywhere and I saw a rat just hanging out. There were beds on the train, but everything just felt like it was infested. I had a fun little room though with Mary, Jesse and Kaia. We were told not to buy biscuits from people on the train, because they have sedatives in them, and to tie our shoes up to help prevent them from getting stolen while we slept…I slept with my shoes by my head, Mary just kept hers on the whole night. Every time I woke up I had to make sure all my possessions were still there. We arrived in Erode at about 6 AM. We drove to our host family’s very nice, plain, clean house…it was kind of just walls and no ceilings. It felt like you were in an indoor courtyard. They made amazing tea and coffee for us and gave us a little tour. We walked around outside and looked at banana trees and coconut trees. I got to climb up part of a coconut tree!! We went to a couple of factories – a coconut factory, a cotton factory (I got to help make a carpet), a sugarcane factory, and an herbal medicine factory. I really like seeing that stuff because in the US I feel like we just see finished products…so it is so cool to watch raw materials become works in progress, so much work and time goes into that! We also saw a lot of schools. Most of the kids are just Obsessed with our digital cameras, and just try to snatch them and take pictures of themselves/nothing in particular. I loaned my camera out to many a children, but I made sure it was double looped on their wrist so they wouldn’t hurt it. One time I left my camera on the bus and kids would come up and ask for it and when I told them I didn’t have it they would just walk away from me! All the kids we saw though were learning English, and all were eager and curious to come up and talk to us. They pretty much just know how to say, “hi, what’s your name, how are you, I’m good, thanks,” so we had to use different methods of interaction. I played blocks with a girl. Sometimes you just sit with them and smile. My favorite time in India was probably teaching this group of Indian girls the hokey pokey (my idea!) – that was a blast! Also, I ended up getting into an intense game of basketball, 5 Indian girls versus 3 SAS guys and another SAS girl and myself. It was a good game, they gave us a workout! I’m pretty sure we won though… Yeah all the kids were just awesome. All the food we ate was so authentic! We ate off of huge green plant leaves one day. The food was spicy and delicious, I tried things although I had no idea what they were (be proud!!!), and I didn’t get sick at all (thanks to pepto probably). It was really nice to have genuine Indian food because on my other trips we end up eating at buffets or something that’s just like…this isn’t Thai food…so yeah we definitely got a good deal food-wise!! We went to the market one evening and that was such a good rural life snap shot! People grow food or have spices that they probably brought from their house, and then they just lay out a blanket and spread out their stuff on the ground and sit there. Our host lady and her two daughters who were 6 and 11 were all fabulous and completely fluent in English. That was awesome because we had so many conversations and asked so many questions…it’s rare where you get those kind of candid, honest answers from locals. We interviewed the lady for a good hour one night and audio-recorded a lot of it. One night we watched this drummer troupe drum for us and we got to dance with them. But their dances were hard and I have no rhythm so that didn’t work out too well, but it was fun! In between songs they would heat their drums up over an open fire to change the pitch! We went to a place for polio kids that SAS donates a lot of money to. Some of the kids put on a song and dance for us that was so cute! And in return we performed a horrible version of “Lean on Me.” Then we presented them with money and played with the kids a little bit. At the main school we were at, the kids put on this Fabulous performance! A group of 8 guys did this hilarious song/dance medley and then these 6 girls did this dance routine that could have been part of a high school competition! The kids treated us like celebrities, they just wanted to talk to us, take pictures with us, perform for us, play with us, get our autographs, trade stuff with us (like bandanas for bracelets)…they were so awesome. We took another sleep train back (we spent 2 days and 1 night at these peoples’ house) that was even worse than the first because we were right next to the “bathroom.” Gross. But hey – we were on a sleeper train in India, so not much to actually complain about! Everybody loved the home stay, but when we got to the ship everybody pretty much ran to their showers.

So in Chennai – days 4 and 5 of India…there were people right outside the ship letting us use their cell phones to call the states for $1/3 minutes…which is expensive, but better than my phone card, which would have cost me $.59/minute. So I called Jon and home, but the parents were gone so I got to talk to Jonathan (which was wonderful!) Then I showered and ate breakfast and then headed out to go shopping. I was planning on going with Mary and Megan, and the three of us would fit in one tuk-tuk and it would be great. Then this girl Elizabeth (who is also in my Vicarious Voyage group) randomly asked if she could come with us (she usually ignores everybody and I always try to be nice to her). So…she came with us…and Megan and Mary and I are all nice people…we’re just not friends with her. And she’s a Very difficult person to get along with. She is easily offended, so while I usually watch my mouth anyway I end up saying things that normally people would not be offended by, that somehow offends her, and then I have to backtrack and apologize and it’s…just very frustrating and a huge exercise in patience to be around this girl. She came with us and we all wanted to not be with her but Mary was like, “we are not leaving her alone in India,” and I was the one making sure we didn’t get separated in the mall (because we had two totally different agendas). So this girl goes up to Megan (who had the least patience with her of the three of us) and asks her if I was trying to ditch her. WHAT?!?!?! No. Ugh. Anyway finally I guess she realized that it wasn’t working out in terms of group dynamics and she had to go to different things and go back to the ship. Then we started having a ton of fun shopping. We kind of went crazy. India’s the last “cheap” place we’re going to, so I bought a lot of stuff. Up until this port, I was like, yeah I know how I’m getting everything home. Let’s just say that…now, I don’t. But I do have a lot of awesome presents for people!!! So I feel good about that. Also we got into some long/intense conversations with some of the shopkeepers and made friends with them. That made me feel better about spending the afternoon in an Indian shopping center. The tuk-tuk drivers rip us off just for fun and it’s obnoxious and one of the most frustrating things that happened in India. One driver in particular agreed to take us back to the boat for a reasonable price, but said we had to stop at one store first (they usually are working with that store, so if we buy something en route they’ll get a commission). One store turned into two, and none of us bought anything. So all of a sudden he just STOPS and is like, “my carburetor broke, sorry, get out.” And we were all like, “ARE YOU SERIOUS?!?” Megan, who reminds me more and more of Kay the more I hang out with her, starts just screaming and cussing at our driver because we all knew he was lying…and Mary and I are just sitting there going…ok, what do we do now, let’s just flag down another tuk-tuk. Finally we got one and as soon as our backs were turned our first tuk-tuk disappeared into the traffic. He let us out in the middle of a busy street. Traffic in India is not fun or safe to just be hanging out in. Anyway, we made it back to the ship alive and my whole body was sore from carrying all the bags. We decided to call that a night and went to bed early so that we could have a full day the next day.

The last day we got up and went to the orphanage. Apparently, they didn’t need crayons and pens, they needed diapers, and oh I don’t know, practical things like that. So I felt really dumb handing my stuff over that I brought for the kids. The visiting hours are weird and we had another bad tuk-tuk experience (called our driver lied to us when he said he knew where he was going and it took us literally 40+ minutes to get to this orphanage that’s 5 minutes away from the boat) so we only had about an hour there. But I really wish we could have spent more time at the orphanage! The kids were so cute and so messed up. It was a pretty big project, you had to focus on one for like 15+ minutes to even attempt a connection with one of them. I think the oldest kid there is like 34. They all had physical and/or mental disabilities. The orphanage couldn’t wash fabric fast enough so they end up sitting in their waste for hours. A good number of them were basically completely unresponsive. There was one boy there who was so cute though, and he would come up and blow up his cheeks so you would do the same, and then he’d pop them, and then he’d kiss his hand and put his hand on your cheek. Anyway visiting hours were over too soon, so we tuk-tuked to a temple, which we didn’t actually go to cuz we were all templed out and there was tons of good street shopping right outside. Since it was our last day, I was a VICIOUS bargainer, and it was awesome!!!! After the temple we went back to the mall area (because we realized that we did NOT buy enough cheap awesome stuff the day before) and bought more stuff (mostly for other people though). So anyway, it was a good day of shopping. Oh and for lunch we ate at this American restaurant owned by this Hawaiian guy. It was awesome. And clean. And delicious. And it was so American, he had like license tags from all the different states and bumper stickers from different universities and a Mariner’s jersey hanging up…so it was like eating in a little tiny piece of home…

Alright…well that doesn’t do India justice at all. I didn’t have the experience I thought I would there. I almost cried twice, but didn’t actually cry. I definitely saw a lot of layers of India, the city and a rural village, authentic food, private school for well off kids and a polio rehab center, and factories etc. I guess I just thought there would be one incident that would hit me really hard and just Bam change my life or something…and that never happened. So I ended up feeling like India wasn’t what I was expecting or preparing myself for, but also like it has changed me in ways that I don’t know about and will discover in like 20 years. It’s a good thing there’s so many SAS kids though because India definitely really changed a lot of peoples’ lives, and I’ve heard all their stories, and they’re amazing!!

This week on the ship is full of meetings, as usual, and tests, quizzes, papers, and reading, as well as fun things like the Sea Olympics, talent shows (kids and the crew!), and other random things. I know who I’m traveling in Egypt with though I don’t know what we’re doing yet, and I have tentative plans for Turkey that involve Troy!!!! How awesome will that be to say that I went to Troy!?! But I feel like Egypt is that last dangerous place we’re going to, and we’re only 11 hours ahead of Seattle time now. So I’m on my way back, we are officially past the half way mark. I can feel the flood of emotions starting to build up in everybody, we’re all so excited for the countries, people are planning out when they think they’ll start crying as the voyage creeps closer to a close, and people are so happy to be going back to boyfriends and families and apartments. It’s a strange mix. But I definitely have found my comfort zone on ship, I really like the people I’ve been hanging out with and am finally feeling like I’m making some good connections. Anyway, my goals for today are to start a paper, catch up on politics reading and on my politics journal…and then tonight is my “Sea Social,” which is where the section of the rooms that are in the Mediterranean Sea (my sea) are going to dress up like it’s new years of 1969 and hang out tonight….should be an interesting time!

That’s about it for now…I can’t wait to come back and talk about all the real stories in person. Hope everything is going well for you guys! Look for another update in about 2 weeks, we have a lot of transit aka class time before Egypt and then we spent 5 days there. You’ll hear from me after that.

Love,
Hilary

Friday, October 12, 2007

Thailand

Sawasdee-Ka!

NO, I have NOT forgotten about my poor blog…it’s just that I honestly have no time to write. Writing always takes longer than I think it will. I had a midterm this morning so I was studying for that, and now I have another midterm and a big project due on Sunday so that’s what I’ll be focusing on next…so I need to get Thailand out of my system because we’re going to be in India soon! We’re actually in Singapore right now bunkering I think is the term – getting more fuel and food; yay!

Alright the run down, Thailand Day 1:
I was on a group trip that was headed for Phuket and then Bangkok. We were the first trip off the boat, and I heard (although every rumor I’ve ever heard on the ship has been false) that they didn’t let everybody else (not on trips through SAS) off the boat until 2:30 PM so that people would miss their flights trying to make it to the Half Moon Party (a crazy drunken extravaganza). I recognized a girl from my Japan trip, her name is Ellen. We sat together on the bus and talked for most of the long ride to the airport, which was great because in Japan it was Ellen, five other girls and myself so I hadn’t gotten to know her that well and she was really awesome! She was pretty much my other half for the next 5 days, though we did meet up with some more awesome girls (Mary, Kendra, Roberta, namely) and had a great little group going. So the first day was just a lot of transportation. We finally arrived at our hotel-resort…which had the biggest most gorgeous swimming pool I’ve ever seen, complete with a bar you could swim up to, a little enclosed area, and an Ariel Little Mermaid rock in the water to pose on. I am seriously considering having my honey moon in Thailand, dependent upon the water not being yellow with visible specks of dirt in it when it should be nice and clear. That night Ellen and I went out with a couple other girls for dinner and shopped around at the market and then got a traditional Thai massage for about $9. It was way better than my Cambodian massages and it felt so good! After that we were pretty much just ready for bed.

Thailand Day 2:
Well, Ellen and I had switched things around so that we could be roommates and also be on the same busses for the same trips. We were with 120 people, divided into 2 groups of 60. From there, Ellen and my group was divided into three groups of 20 people and we did a rotation of three fabulous activities. First up was the Jungle Safari!!! It was amazing!! We all got ponchos on the bus while it was super sunny and our guide was like, “weather changes quickly here,” and while we were filing off the bus it started to monsoon-rain! Hahah. So we ponchoed-up and took a raft made of bamboo to the other side. My Keen shoes worked out perfectly, I just pranced across the rocks and logs and through the mud and water while everybody else worried about their shoes and socks. Some of us got a little lost but while we were lost I got to look at rubber trees up close! We met up with our group and spent an hour and half walking through this gorgeous green jungle amidst intervals of rain. Oh we also got large bamboo walking sticks which were actually very useful! After our safari we had lunch with the rest of our group – there was humongous noodles involved and rice with a spicy chicken sauce that was delicious. After that was elephant riding time!! Today I think was my favorite day in port, everything was so exciting, and it was so much fun hanging out with Ellen. Our elephant’s name was BuBu, or maybe BuPu, but I will call her BuBu. She was big and leathery and hairy and really fun to ride. I got to feed her some fruit at the end and she snotted all over my arm and it was really gross. It’s hard to describe riding an elephant without pictures! After elephanting, we had a guide take us on inflatable canoes down a little river. He let me paddle for a little while and that felt really good. Back at the hotel we met up with Mary, Kendra, Roberta, and Christina and went out to Mexican food. They had a live girl cover band playing which was hilarious and so much fun! We started signing along to one of the songs and the singer brought the microphone up to our table and we all shouted into it. It was a really cool atmosphere. After that Ellen and I wanted another massage so our groups split. Once again, after the massage we were ready for sleep.

Thailand Day 3:
Today was sea cave day! We all went out on a boat together (yeah I get a lot of boat time) and then when we got to the caves there were two people to a boat plus a guide. The canoes were inflatable but very sturdy. Our guide’s name I think was Dee. We went to a number of different caves and in the process saw lots of fun animals. We first went to the Bat Cave I think, where there were TONS of fruit bats hanging from the ceiling! We had to lay flat on our backs to get into the caves and then it was dark and stinky around the bats. Back in the light on the other side we were in a lagoon type thing and it was so beautiful! We also went to a Diamond Cave where everything was really glittery…but we kind of got jipped cuz I guess it looks better when it’s dry and it was rainy out. We also went to two more caves. Outside of one there were a whole much of macaque monkeys! Ellen and I had brought a banana to feed monkeys if we saw them so we got all excited. There was only one monkey close by when I pulled the banana out of my pocket but 5 more immediately ran over across the rocks close to our boat. Then like 3 monkeys Jumped in the water and started swimming out to our boat!!! I did not know monkeys could swim! At all! AND THEN two of them Jumped onto our canoe and came up and started pawing at our arms and hands!!! It was crazy! So I got scared and ended up just giving the banana to the monkey that was like attacking me instead of sharing it with all of them and of course he ate all of it and didn’t share with the skinny monkeys. In the caves we also saw some very brightly colored crabs… I mean like bright turquoise!! And also some mud skippers which are just brown and hang out in mud and look like slugs. After the sea caves we had an amazing lunch on the way to the beach we were going to. My new favorite food is tempura pineapple. So then we got to the beach and of course I had forgotten to bring my bathing suit on the entire TRIP so I just hung out…some people were playing soccer on the beach so I kind of played for a few minutes but I wasn’t really dressed appropriately so it was difficult. I resorted to walking around looking at cool animals. I saw all of a sea cucumber’s guts still attached to the sea cucumber and also I saw an intact sea cucumber. Our guide found an enormous star fish that I got to hold! And we also saw tiny little white crabs in the sand. Back on the tour boat they gave each of us an entire coconut, so I tried fresh coconut and coconut milk…not that good…but I tried it! Back at the hotel we met up with our little group again and went back to the Mexican restaurant, shopped, and wandered around seeing the night life. We had a couple crazy incidents but they’re funnier in person I’m sure so you’ll have to remind me. But we ended up staying out pretty late and walking on Patong Beach at like 3 30 in the morning and eventually made it back to our hotel.

Thailand Day 4:
We had to get up early to get to the airport, we were headed to Bangkok. We were on the biggest plane I think I’ve ever seen, it had an upper level and 10 seats across! When we got to our hotel, our group ate at this little Italian place in the basement. Then Mary and I separated from the rest so that we could go shopping. We took a tuk-tuk to this disgusting day market where everything smelled like vomit and I felt like I couldn’t breathe. Finally we started making our way back to the hotel, stopped off at a Starbucks (my first time doing that on this trip!) and ended up walking right into the Night Market (which was our goal of the day to find). The night market was so much fun! I bargained a lot and bought lots of cool little things. I just figured, India is the last super cheap place we’re going and I haven’t bought that much stuff yet and I need to use up some of this money…so yeah night market was super fun! Then it was massage time again, but this time I decided I just wanted a foot reflexology massage…that sounded perfect to me. The first place we went to was in a dark upstairs room and the owner was a Lady Boy and it felt really sketchy, and then they didn’t know what reflexology was (everybody else was advertising it), so I was like, this isn’t what I wanted and this place is freaking me out, so we left. Then we went to this super nice place that smelled like menthol and was brightly lit and you could see the street outside. So they give us these silk pants to change into and they’re working on our left feet and I realize that we forgot to ask if they take credit cards (a lot of them don’t). They didn’t. So we spent like 15 minutes trying to explain to them that we really did not have the money to pay for this, even between both of us, we didn’t have a debit card, and no, we were not going to send just one of us to go back to the hotel alone in the dark. So we just paid them some of the money and walked out. The third place we went to finally worked out. Our masseuses were very nice and when I told Jon I got a foot massage he goes, “what, it didn’t tickle?!?!” and I was like, “oh no, it did, I made a scene, don’t you worry.” It was actually a little embarrassing cuz you’re supposed to be quiet, and every once in a while I would just like yelp and flinch really hard and they would all laugh at me…ooops. Anyway we learned that of our $9 massage, our ladies only got paid $3/massage, got no hourly wage, and it cost them about $3 a day just to transport themselves from home to work. So Mary and I tipped them all the money in cash we had left…we tried to tip more but they wouldn’t accept tips on my credit card. We walked back to the hotel, and in the process, literally almost walked into a real elephant. Just walking on the street. Yeah. This other guy almost ran into it also and he screamed a little and it was kind of hilarious. Anyway…it had been a long day of walking, our feet felt great, and so we slept. Or, we slept until our roommates came back at 3 AM and needed to be let in…

Thailand Day 5:
We went to the Grand Palace and saw the Emerald Buddha (the biggest Buddha carved out of a single piece of jade). The palace was of course gorgeous and it was fun walking through that. Then we went to this huge jewelry store and tried on diamond rings just for fun and looked at other expensive things. Then we went back to the hotel, ate at the Italian place again, and then it was basically time to go. But I didn’t have my plate for my collection yet, so Ellen and I like bolted off to this market, couldn’t find one, but somehow made it back to the bus in time. The bus ride back to the port was 2 ½ hours long, and even after spending 5 days together we still talked for about 2 of those hours while most everybody slept. Back at the port, I dropped my stuff off on the boat and then made a big mistake – I took my $US to the little port shops…which are already more expensive and harder to bargain. But I had to get my plate, and also I got a phone card to call Jon and my parents. They were all super thrilled when I called at 3:30 and 4 AM…anyway I ended up buying more stuff than I was planning on at the port stores but I got some cool things. And that was Thailand.

Ship Life:
I had my politics midterm yesterday and I think it went fine. The second global studies test is coming up on Sunday so I’m studying a lot for that. My leadership class is going better, I think because we’ve started doing projects in port and the accounting is all set up so things are actually moving now. My friend group seems to have shifted a bit – I’ve been seeing less of Victoria and Camilla and Katie and more of the people I’ve met on my trips, which I really like. I still feel like I’m always in meetings, half of which occur during meals, but I’ve been having fun with people and also been spending a lot of time in my room studying and trying to sleep. Anyway, I’m feeling quite comfortable on the ship and having a great time. I think I need to go buy some Pepto before India though. I’m excited for India, all the professors keep saying, “you haven’t seen anything yet, just wait til you get to India. India will change your life.” So I’m a little nervous, but my home stay should be Awesome and Mary, Adam, Megan, and Jesse are all on it so I’m excited to hang out with them! Except Adam thinks he’s going to trade me for a cow…so I need to watch out for that among diarrhea and other things! Oh, and yesterday there was a GBLT Open Mic night and peoples’ stories on this ship are just amazing!! So many of them almost made my eyes water. We have a cool community here.

OK, sorry it took me so long to do this…you have no freaking idea how busy it gets here, it’s a little chaotic. And if it makes you feel any better, I’m about a week behind on my personal journal because I just don’t have the time it would take right now to write in it. And I’m two countries behind in my politics journal. I’m awesome at life. Also, we’re tearing through the water right now at about 25 knots, partly because we’re half a day behind because fueling took longer, but partly because WE’RE IN PIRATE AREA!!! Unfortunately, Captain Jeremy has never had any pirate encounters. The end.

Love,
Hilary

Wednesday, October 3, 2007

Viet Nam / Cambodia

Wow. Back again. I feel like my blog entries are going to get shorter and shorter, but they don’t…they stay long. It took me a total time of probably 7+ hours to handwrite my personal journal, and another good chunk of hours to hand write my politics journal (which I’m doing for a grade), so by the time I get to this blog…I’m so exhausted from writing about everything, and I feel like I’m about a billion hours behind on school work. So anyway I’m just going to apologize now for the watered down version, which believe it or not, this is, and justify it with…at least I will remember all the real stories for when I’m home.

So Vietnam was fantastic! I spent the first and last of our five days in port in Ho Chi Minh City (which many people still refer to as Saigon), and I spent the middle three days in Cambodia.

I got up early the morning we arrived in Vietnam to watch our boat float down the Mekong River…much, much different from the vast ocean. It is always so exciting to see land! Vietnam looked pretty much how I had imagined it to look, very green and jungle-y with murky brown water. I did the City Orientation tour, which actually turned out to be really cool. We went to a temple built by the Chinese at some point during their 1000 year occupation of Vietnam, and then we went to this lacquer shop, which was incredible! We got to watch the artisans crush up egg shell and make these fabulous designs. They would drop the egg shell over a certain area of their project, and then use a brush and brush it away, but some of the egg shells would stick (where they were supposed to be in the art piece). I hope that makes sense. Then they would use this little chisel to clean up the edges and define the lines. It was so cool! They also use a lot of mother of pearl, and embed that into their intricate designs. It was very fun to watch and the finished products were just beautiful! We went to the presidential palace and got a tour of that which included seeing the room where south Vietnam surrendered to North Vietnam at the end of the war. We had a 4 course set meal lunch in which I tried a new shrimp dish (yayyyy Hilary!!!!). They brought out the shrimp wrapped around a piece of sugar cane, so you scrape it off and put it on this incredibly thin race paper circle and then put veggies and sauces in it, wrap it up and eat it. Very good. We didn’t get to go to the War Museum but we did get to go to some History Museum. The main thing we did there though was watch a cultural Vietnamese water puppet show…which was really fun! The puppets are dressed so eloquently and the puppeteers stand behind a screen waist deep in water for the entire 20-30 minute show. This would all be much easier to describe with pictures. Which I have TONS of. Have you guys heard of Weasel Coffee? I guess it’s famous and super expensive. There are no Starbucks in Vietnam because the Vietnamese like their coffee. I don’t even like coffee and I tried this Weasel Coffee and it was amazing! So we did that. I had told my tour guide that a bunch of us wanted to go get tailored dresses made, so after our normal tour, he volunteered to take us to a nice but not too expensive shop, take everybody else back to the ship, and then come back and pick us up! It was so nice of him!! So I got 2 dresses made, which I am very excited about!! I like one better than the other, but I will wear both for sure and…I got dresses custom made in Vietnam, so whatever. We went back to the ship, dropped off stuff, regrouped, and then a bunch of us headed back out. Not getting ripped off by cab drivers is an art! You have to be So careful with them. I was fine but I heard of people getting stuck with a $40 fare for like a 5 minute ride because they weren’t careful enough. I spent the night wandering with SAS-ers, hanging out around town and it was a lot of fun. Usually I don’t like to be in the big big SAS groups, but I met new people and everybody was really fun so it was OK for one night. My last day in Vietnam, I woke up 12 minutes before I had to be at the bus for my trip. We drove for like 3 hours and finally had lunch. After lunch we went to the Cao Dai temple, which is a really colorful, cool, religious place. Yellow = Buddhism, Red = Confucianism, Blue = Daoism, and White = all the new people who haven’t picked a focus I guess yet. So the monks all wear different colored robes and we watched them do their prayer service/ritual for like half an hour and it was really pretty and cool to see! Then we went to a cemetery/war memorial before heading off to Cu Chi to go crawl through tunnels!! It was a lot more than just tunnels though. The grounds are still run by the army so our tour guide recommended to us that we NOT try to bargain for things…we saw all types of different traps used, the original size of the holes the Viet Cong would use, original entrances, everything. It was so awesome. I did all the crawling I could do, I was wearing my grimy clothes and I had my flashlight. You could do either 30, 60, or 100 yards and I did all 100, but those tunnels were built for tourists to get an idea of what they were like, so I’m pretty sure they were similar, but fake. Then you could do a bonus 50 yard crawl through I think real tunnels, or at least more realistic. There were no turnouts for the whole 50 yards and it was smaller, narrower, and darker, and I did that one too!!! It was so much fun. It was really eery being there though because the military has a shooting range there too that they let tourists use ($1/bullet)…so while we were walking around this place we were hearing machine guns, M16’s, and AK47’s going off…creepy. Much as I hate guns, I would have shot one for the experience of it, but the joys of group travel moved our group along before I had time to. We watched a really anti-American war documentary before heading back to the ship. Then it was like panic time – everybody was trying to do all these last minute things before on ship time. (If you’re not back to the ship on time, you get dock time, which means once we’re in the next port…you can’t go out for a certain amount of time). I went out with this girl Jordan, I didn’t really have anything I needed to do except for find somebody to give me a postcard and bargain for last minute things, but Jordan needed stamps, postcards, and a magazine, so we were like rushing through Saigon. We decided, against all SAS rules and general safety precautions, to pay $1 and ride on the back of a motor bike. There are lots of those people trying to get you to hop on their bike and they’ll take you anywhere in town for $1. I hadn’t done it yet because I’d heard we shouldn’t do it and I knew they were dangerous…but I really wanted to, so I did it anyway. I thought I was going to die. I didn’t want to hold on to the anonymous driver in front of me so I held on with both hands to this bar behind me for Dear Life as he zoomed and honked and swerved. It was terrifying and completely exhilarating. Finally he plopped me down next to Jordan and we went about our errands. When we were all done we hopped on two different motor bikes and this time the driver was much slower and stayed with Jordan’s driver which was really nice, and it made it easier to look around and enjoy the city. My only worry with that was that I really thought this car was going to hit me when we were merging one time, but it didn’t : ) yay! haha Oh Daddy I’m sure you’re freaking out right now. But it’s ok, I’m still alive! I’m not one of the 25+ people that actually had to go to the clinic for bruises, burns and pussing scrapes they got for getting off of the wrong side of the bike or for getting completely thrown off while hitting another motor bike (this one girl’s face is messsssed up!!!) so I guess that’s why we’re not allowed to ride them. Alright so that was basically Viet Nam…I wish we would have had more time there, I really wanted to go on a trip on the Mekong River and I wanted to go to the War Museum also. I will have to come back sometime I guess…

Cambodia was amazing!! I had no idea what to expect, but it was just really beautiful there. There were a couple sweet thunder storms while we were there (it’s monsoon season), but the rain didn’t stop us at all. The first night all we really did was go on a river cruise (which was lame cuz it was cloudy so we couldn’t see the sunset and … we’re on a boat alllll the time so it wasn’t that magical) and then out to a buffet dinner. So many buffet dinners!! It’s annoying, because they make sense – everybody can find something, big room, blah blah blah…but I feel like it’s fake food from the countries we’re from, not their normal cuisine. After the dinner though when we got to the hotel, a group of 4 other girls and myself headed out to get some sweet $6/HOUR massages!!!! That was my first professional massage and it was an interesting experience…I’m glad I went with people. We were all really really excited about it. The next day after breakfast we went to the Tuol Sleng genocide museum…which used to be a torture prison…which used to be a high school…it was eery, creepy, gross, sad, and I didn’t take that many pictures there. Also eating beforehand was not the best idea. It was so hard to look at pictures of victims’ faces and learn about it, but it was so interesting and I really believe that it’s incredibly important for people to keep learning about atrocities the world has already seen in an effort to prevent them from reoccurring. But yeah, it was a dark, sober morning. From there we went to the Killing Fields which was somehow not what I expected but nauseating and powerful just the same. The Pol Pol regime didn’t want to use bullets on people because bullets were expensive and they didn’t want people to have a quick, relatively painless death. So they would use a lot of torture and especially for babies and kids they would just bash their heads on a tree (in front of their mothers, of course), before tossing them aside into a mass grave. So lots of the graves were next to trees used for that purpose, other graves were just grassy pits in the ground. The dirt we walked on literally had bones and teeth showing through from the rain that has brought them up to the surface. Also, Pol Pol was not his actual name, it was a nick name that stands for Political Potential…which haunted me all day. And, I didn’t realize before that the Khmer Rouge “boys” was not a mis-translation of our tour guide…the boys they used to do the killing were literally between 12 and 20 years old. It gets better: the current Cambodian Prime Minister was a Khmer Rouge boy….gross gross gross. So it was a sad and heavy morning. To lighten things up after that we went to the Russian Market, which I don’t think has anything to do with Russia, and did some bargaining. I got some COOL things there!!!!! I’m so excited about them! Then we went to lunch before visiting the Royal Palace where the King still lives and the Silver Pagoda (a room with like silver tiles as the floor). Then we headed to a history museum before going to the airport to fly to Siem Reap. Once in Siem Reap we went to dinner that also included these amazing cultural dance show!!! The outfits were gorgeous and the little mini stories were so cute! After dinner a different group of girls and I went out and got a $5 massage!!! We arrived down town via a Touk Touk (which is a carriage type thing attached to a motor bike). Our driver’s brother was named Sambo and he was really nice. He came to pick us up after our massage and got us safely back to the hotel. I want a Touk Touk. I got up the next morning for the Angkor Wat sunrise tour…but it was cloudy, as usual…but still it was fun to go see Angkor Wat in the dawn light as the day came on. It’s very magestic, but more about that later. We went back to the hotel for breakfast and to check out and then went to Ta Prohm (where Lara Croft: Tomb Raider was filmed). That place was gorgeous!!! The rocks were just so beautiful…it was all in ruins but some things were still standing and the bas-reliefs were so intricate and detailed! I really loved that place. Then we went back to Angkor Wat in the daylight. We got to walk around, take lots of pictures, and I got to climb to the top of it, to the third level. It was Really scary!!! The steps are so steep, and they go so high, and they are so falling apart…but it was an adventure, and I’m still alive!! And the top level of Angkor Wat was gorgeous!!! The windows without panes looked like a painted picture with the scenery you could see through them. It was just so grandiose and beautiful. We spent some time up there before making our way carefully back down, holding on to this skinny metal rod hand rail on our way down for dear life. I just found out yesterday that Unesco, the company that is preserving Angkor Wat, literally JUST declared that climbing the steps to the top of Angkor Wat was too dangerous for the thousands of tourists that go every year, and the day after we left Cambodia, I heard from the other SAS Cambodia trip, they had guards there already not letting people climb up. So I’m one of the last people ever to stand on top of that thing!!!! Hah! Then we went to Angkor Thom which was a temple with 200+ faces carved into the stones…there were just faces everywhere…there was also the Elephant Pagoda, with Tons of elephants carved into a wall, and then the Leper King Terrace with just one statue of the Leper King. After all those adventures we went back to the airport and finally arrived back at home sweet home…aka the ship. That was our last night to go out in Vietnam, so after I showered Melissa and Michelle and I went out to the night market and then out to this restaurant called Pho 2000 which is really famous in Saigon because Bill Clinton ate there in 2000 and it’s named after him I guess. There are a ton of pictures of him on the wall. So I got Pho Bo there (traditional Vietnamese beef noodle soup, and it was delicious, and dinner and a beer cost me a whopping $2.5, so yeah…pretty good.

So I think that is pretty much it. I am still meeting new people, getting to know acquaintances better, and everybody is just so excited all the time either about the last port or the next that people are always in a good mood and it’s a fun atmosphere. I know two of my friends that are going to be on my India home stay with me, and we’re getting sooo excited! Except for the boy, Adam, is already talking about trading me for a cow haha. But yeah I’m having a lot of fun with the people and everybody is passed the point of stressing out about classes lol so we’re all just kind of doing our best and hanging in there. For me, journaling and sleeping so that I’m not sick in these countries is sometimes a priority over doing homework that’s not due. So yeah I have a lot of catching up to do, but I’ve been experiencing everything safely and healthily and doing tons of trips so it is really wonderful.

However, there has been an outbreak of infectious diarrhea. If more than 2% of the ships population has it, our doctor is required to report it to the Center for Disease Control. From there, CDC has the right to board our ship, quarantine us from port, quarantine just those individuals that are sick, etc. We are supposed to dock in Thailand tomorrow and currently we are pushing upwards of 5% of people here having diarrhea…so it’s really serious…we really may not port tomorrow in Thailand. So that’s kind of scary, but hopefully my peers are taking care of themselves so that our doctor doesn’t have to lie (because she is definitely not going to put her medical license on the line so that we can give Thai people with leprosy and aids infectious diarrhea) and so that we can go to Thailand. Assuming all goes well, I’ll be headed off for more adventures tomorrow!!!

Until next time,
Hilary

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

China

Nihao!!

So China is over already! How did that happen?? About ¼ of my trip is done now…I can hardly believe it! So here’s the deal…believe it or not, I just don’t have the time to write out a two hour blog post about my trip to China. I’m going to give a brief summary, sorry if it’s boring. Just think that whenever you see me, all the stories are written down (in my personal journal), so perhaps I can tell you the exciting stuff when we are together in 3D. I have no time because the classes are so far from fake it is not even funny. They expect us to do an INREDIBLE amount of work, mostly reading, while visiting these countries. If they’re acknowledging that we have no weekends and that countries are fun but not a break and NOT a chance to study, they have a very funny way of showing it. We generally have only two days in between ports, in which everybody pretty much sleeps through class because they’re so exhausted, tries to recover from any illnesses or injuries incurred in port, upload and sharing pictures, updating blogs, writing journals, hearing all their friends’ stories, and….oh yeah, doing class work and constantly going to meetings, most of which are mandatory or just necessary. It’s ridiculous.

Anyway…China! The first day in Qingdao, my sister Erica met up with me! It was really fun – despite the fact that I despised Qingdao. It was rainy and gross, the people were rude and none of the spoke English (people told me that lots of people in China spoke English), I felt like I was constantly either being ripped off or trying to be ripped off, and it was just bad. But once I met up with Erica, we wandered around, she bargained for some necklaces for me, we strolled the coast line, went to some small parks, ate noodles for dinner and had imported black tea with some Chinese man (he strained it right in front of us)! So seeing her was very fun, but I was sooo ready to wake up the next morning and go to Beijing!

In Beijing, we basically just did all of the touristy stuff: we shopped/bargained/got harassed at the famous Silk Street fake name brand market, had a Peking Duck gourmet Chinese welcome banquet dinner (yes I tried it! So proud of myself! Would never order it though…), and headed back to the hotel. The next day we climbed the Great Wall and many of us took a toboggan type sled all the way down! It was a lot of fun and cameras were going off like crazy. We had a photo op of the AMAZING Olympic venues being built for 2008!!! So cool! The next day was jam packed with things: we did Tiananmen Square, saw Mao’s Memorial Hall and his dead embalmed body, saw the Forbidden City and the Imperial Palace, as well as the Temple of Heaven and another bargaining market. That night we met up with Chinese university students, from the University of International Business and Economics. Although most of them had never been to a bar before, they rented one out just for our large group (of about 120 people in total) (what does that say about American culture?) My girl, Fubeili was really nice! Two of the boys from UW and I went outside with our students and had a really great conversation with them, so that was a fun cultural exchange. After the little gathering, a group of us just hung out in a café in the warm night air. Beijing is so dirty that it turned the inside of my nose black! I wish I could go back and see it next year to see how much they can do to get ready for the Olympics…they have quite a bit of work to do but they’re going at it full speed and doing their best. The last day we went to the UIBE and walked around for a little bit. They have goats on their campus. Weird. It was a Sunday but many students were in classrooms, unsupervised and studying. We then went to a Lama temple that was really pretty before heading off to the Summer Palace…where I kind of want to now live…it was GORGEOUS!!!!!

Our plane from Beijing to Hong Kong got us back to the ship right before 2 AM…so I got very little sleep before waking up and going on my trip to Lantau Island and visiting the longest beach in southern HK (don’t get too excited, it was 80 degrees and pouring rain), a super adorable fishing town with a fun place called the Tai O Market Street (don’t worry I have tons of pictures!!!), and then we went to the largest bronze outdoor Buddha in the world. It was enormous!! After hanging out with Buddha, we went to a monastery and ate a traditional vegetarian meal – which included some amazing spring rolls and some very delicious vegetables. Upon arriving back in the main part of Hong Kong, all I had time to do was make it to the post office and buy stamps and mail off postcards before going to back towards the ship. The ship was docked at the largest mall in Hong Kong…so I spent a chunk of time calling Jon and my parents (in the middle of the night for all of them, of course), and then went out to dinner. The mall just happened to have a Roots store – my favorite store ever, which I have never seen outside of Canada. And Roots just happened to be having a 50% off sale on tons of stuff including yoga clothes. So I got this super cute yoga shirt that I love for about US$12!!!!! I’m very excited about that.

Anyhow, I wish I had more time to tell you about my reactions to China and the stark contrasts between China and Japan that are so obvious to me now…but this morning we are floating down the Mekong River towards our port in Ho Chi Minh City in Vietnam, and yesterday I got up at 4 AM and did pretty much nothing but school work and going to meetings, and then I of course went to bed late doing all that stuff, and now I’m up early again to watch the sunrise and see the differences between floating in the middle of the ocean and floating down a river….pretty exciting! So from here I go to Vietnam with a side trip to Cambodia, I am so excited!!! So I’ll write again in about another week!

Love,
Hilary

Monday, September 17, 2007

Japan

Konnichiwa! Yeah, another update – finally! Just so you know, all those days you checked this site and were wondering where the updates were, I was in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, wondering where Japan was. We went, and now I am back on the boat!

I had five days in Japan. I saw: Yokohama, Tokyo, Kyoto, Nara, Hiroshima, and Kobe. In five days. How did I do that? This is my (grossly long) story. To help you out though the paragraphs are broken up like so:

Wednesday in Yokohama and Tokyo.
Thursday in Tokyo.
Friday in Kyoto and Nara and Kobe.
Saturday in Kobe and Hiroshima.
Sunday in Kobe.
School Stuff.

We arrived in Yokohama at 7:30 AM. I got four hours of sleep that night, and woke up early to watch us dock. Japanese people were at the pier, playing music for us, taking pictures, and waving, it was very cute. Disclaimer: EVERYBODY and EVERYTHING in Japan was either cute beyond words, uncannily nice, or extremely delicious. We did not get off the boat until 12:30…everybody was going crazy just looking at land and thinking about their trips. Finally we get off and I was signed up for a trip called “Let’s do it over Lunch” where we were going to go somewhere (I still don’t know exactly where) south of Yokohama, meet up with a really important guy from Sony Corporation, and have lunch and a lecture with him. The scenario was that we had just been hired by a Japanese company and we had to research before hand cultural do’s and don’ts of interacting and eating in a business setting. So we were all dressed up, and it took us about 3 hours to get to this place. But we had left the boat so late that we didn’t actually get the lunch!!!! I was furious. I’m pretty sure we get our money back though. We listen to this hour long lecture, which was interesting…and then start the 3 hour trek back. It felt like a waste of a day, so far. My plan was to go back to the boat, find people to walk around Yokohama with, maybe meet up with my friend Cody that was visiting in Japan, and get up for my Cultural Tokyo trip that left the next morning at 8. That’s when Katie peer pressured me into going to Tokyo with her to meet up with our other friends and not wasting a second of time in Japan. It was getting late and I hadn’t found a phone yet so I had no way of calling Cody until about 8 PM, when she told me that she was just leaving Yokohama…so that was too bad  Anyhow, the tone had been set for the rest of my travels. I hopped on a bus, and it took about 3 hours to get to Tokyo. Then we had to find our hostel and we were supposed to check in by 9 and meet up with the rest of our group at 6. So by 8:45 when we got off the public transportation, we literally sprinted through Tokyo trying to find out hostel. At one point a lady trying to help us biked around and we ran after her in the direction of our hostel! People are so willing to just completely drop what they are doing to help you! It’s amazing! We get to our hostels and the rest of our group was actually there, and they’d just gotten there 10 minutes ago!! So that was extremely lucky that we’d all gotten there around the same time and safely. We set out for the night, ran into a couple of other SAS kids, and went out to dinner. Then we just walked around and looked at stuff. At about 1 AM we decided to start heading back to the hostel, but we found a sushi place and stopped there instead. We had a little snack and then made it back by about 2. The hostel had free internet, so we spent HOURS on it and it was great! Around 3:30 I was done with the internet and a little bored, cuz I wasn’t planning on sleeping, when I heard these two guy speaking French. I asked them if I could speak French with them and they were like, ‘you’re the first American we’ve talked to who could speak French!’ so they were all excited and we talked pretty much just in French for about 40 minutes! It was so much fun! Then I killed time until 5 AM when it was time to go meet some other SAS kids that were heading back for 8 AM trips.

So I met up with two boys and we started trying to figure out how to get back to Yokohama. Good thing we met at 5:30 because we did not get back until 7:50 AM!! We ran on to the boat, I changed clothes super quickly, and then walked right off the boat again. After having not slept at all. My Cultural Tokyo tour was really cool though! We went to a big Shinto shrine (I have brochures but I don’t remember the names….sorry) and learned how to ceremoniously wash our hands and mouth and then bowed and went into the shrine and made a wish and then looked at the gift shop. The next stop was the gardens of the Imperial Palace – which were beautifully manicured! I saw some disgusting spiders and some big colorful fish and a lot of pretty plants. After that was the Asakusa district which is where I had actually just been the previous night. There were a lot of shrines and things that I hadn’t seen at nighttime, and there were so many shops and cute things! We weren’t at each place for all that long, so pretty soon it was time to get on the bus again and we went to the Roppongi district. We went to the 52nd floor of some building and had a sweet view of Tokyo! There was a random museum up there too. So after we had done all that, we returned to the boat at about 5:30. I showered, repacked my bag for the coming days, ate dinner, and met up with my next travel group at 8 PM. I still had not slept.

We leave at 8 from the Yokohama port BACK to Tokyo station (so much back and forth!) From Tokyo station, we had to catch some trains and things to catch our night bus. We made our bus with about 3 minutes to spare. Our bus was an overnight bus that you could sleep (uncomfortably) on. It left at 9:50 PM and arrived in Kyoto (other side of the country) at 5:30 AM. I slept poorly for about 4 hours. Upon arrival in Kyoto with my group of 11 other people (Lindsay, Charlotte, Nate, Brittney, Jason, Katie, Kat, Meredith, Ellen, Jenna, Stevie) nothing was open so we wondered around and looked at maps to get an idea of what we wanted to do that day. When a little café opened, we had some Japanese pancakes for breakfast. Then the group split, Charlotte, Nate, Brittney, Jason and Meredith went to Nara, the rest of us stayed in Kyoto for a while. We went to the largest wooden structure in the world – a big Buddhist temple that didn’t allow shoes, so we walked around the temple and museum on tatami mats in bare feet…it was so much fun! The group of girls I was with were amazing! It is really hard to find people you travel well with…but we were all running on little to no sleep, nobody was rude, pushy, aggressive, snappy, or anything else negative. Our motto was, “we’re in Japan; life is great!!” and we all wanted to see the same things and go at the same pace and we all really enjoyed the things we were learning about and it was just so chill, everybody worked together to plan and use transportation and it was just wonderful. I got so lucky finding them! After the Buddhist temple we went to a really pretty garden and walked around that for a while. Then we had our first lunch and looked at some souvenir things. After lunch we went to Nara and had our second lunch. This place was so cool, you just put your money into a vending machine, hit the buttons of the food you want, give the ticket that comes out to the restaurant people, and it’s ready to eat in about a minute…Japanese fast food is way better than American fast food!!! We took a bus that was within walking distance of the biggest Buddha in Japan. However, to walk there, we had to go through the deer…these deer are not just ‘tame’, they are abusive!! They would nuzzle our clothing and leave boogers on them, try to rip our bags out of our hands and eat our ice cream cones! It was pretty funny! We all took lots of pictures. We made our way to big Buddha and it was amazing!! We all got fortunes, but mine was all bad luck so I tied it to a rail and I guess it will get burned from there. After spending a leisurely afternoon walking around Nara we headed to Kobe to our hotel. Our hotel was actually on the outskirts of Kobe, and it was really easy to get to! Transportation took a long time, but it was within walking distance of the station we got off at. We ran into Nate just then and got to our AMAZING hotel. We had two rooms reserved for 5 people each even though there were 12 of us. They were right next door to each other, each room had a balcony facing the water/bridge/Kobe, and the floors were all tatami mats with 5 futons just sprawled out on the ground!!!! It was sooo cool!! Pretty sweet for a hotel! We put our bags down and went out for dinner to this fast food Italian place. The food was of course really good. The funniest part of the meal was these two Japanese boys, probably like 4 and 8 years old and they kept running up to our table and just staring at us, so we started saying hi and I offered to take a picture with them. After that they ran away and then came back and said, ‘where you are from?’ and we guessed that they were running back and forth between their parents and us! They were soo cute! After dinner we headed back to the hotel and hung out and chatted and used phone cards and stuff until about 2:30 AM.

Most of us got up at 6:30 AM to go back to the boat for 8 AM trips. In case you aren’t keeping track, I had now gotten only 4 hours of sleep not on public transportation since Wednesday morning, and this was Saturday now. We made it back to the boat right before 8 only to find that our trips hadn’t left yet because there were Japanese dance troops performing for our boat out on the pier!!! Their costumes were so beautiful! And after they danced for us, they made US dance with them, and they forced us to put down our bags and go out with them. Let me tell you – I looked quite stupid! After that, my trip was leaving so soon that I didn’t have time to get back on the bus and change or shower or anything. So all of a sudden I was on a 5 hour bus ride to Hiroshima. My tour guide’s name was Rumy, and I think she was the cutest person I have ever seen. She sang to us, made us sing with her, played us music, taught us about Japan, taught us words and phrases, including “okini” which means “large thanks” in Kobe/Osaka slang/vernacular. She said if we used it that we would get big smiles from people. I was getting pretty sick of Arigato so I started using Okini and everybody not just smiled at me but started laughing at me…probably because an obviously clueless tourist was using local slang…hahah. We had a couple of bathroom stops along the way, and finally we got to Hiroshima. I’m not sure what to say about it. It was creepy and eerie and intense being there. Just looking around at everything left me feeling…I guess kind of hollow. We did a fly by tour of the monuments and the A-Bomb Dome and then had just less than 2 hours to go through the museum! And I needed way more time than that…I was trying to read everything and realized that I would never be out in 2 hours so I had to speed up. The museum had so many artifacts and models of the city before and after. It had an exhibit set up of people with their skin hanging/dripping off of them, and had clothes, lunch boxes, watches stopped at exactly 8:15, stones with human shadows burned onto them, and a number of other creepy things that had been found or donated. The most nauseating one was the part of a thumb, fingernails, and skin that was all a mother could find of her child. I thought I might vomit. The atomic bomb made peoples’ fingernails grow in as black rods with blood vessels, so that when they were cut people would lose a lot of blood and then more black rods would grow…it had some of those nails too. It was disgusting. At one point when I was reading and looking at things a Japanese Peace Volunteer lady came up and started talking to me and telling me stuff that I had just read, but it was interesting to hear somebody talk me through things and explain things. She talked for a while and I nodded along and at the end she asked me where I was from. That was one of the most powerful moments for me in the museum. Somebody that had a similar experience related it to a German being in a Holocaust. I told her I was from the United States and she smiled and nodded and kept talking…but I just wanted to disappear; I almost started crying when she asked me that. Phewwww so that was a big day. After that it was another 5 hours back to Kobe with a dinner stop along the way. The bus ride was fun because I talked to this girl Tara who is from Malaysia and asked her lots of questions and she was just really cool to talk to. We got back to the boat and everybody was just WIPED out…it was like, what to we do with one more day in Japan, all we want to do is go to sleep! But I chatted with people about their experiences so far and found Victoria and Camilla and made breakfast plans for the next day. I stayed up talking to Victoria for a while and that was great. The more time I spend with her and Camilla and Katie the more I like them. Victoria and I found some cool things we have in common – the kinds of things that you only find out about in the middle of long midnight conversations, so that was great! So it was a fun night, I was happy with Japan, I had met / traveled with awesome people, and I was getting to know a smaller group better and better each day.

I woke up early to go to a Japanese bakery place for breakfast. It was so good and I brought some bread back to eat on the boat! Then Victoria, Camilla, and Lauren were going to go to Nara but Camilla’s foot was swollen … it was like the size of a small child. They weren’t sure they’d have enough time to go to Nara and come back so they all just stayed in Kobe with me. We walked around and went shopping and looked at things here and there. We stopped at a café and three of us wrote out all of our postcards. We searched for an internet café, which turned out to be magical. Jon had sent me a message that send, ‘call me as soon as you can and I can get you directions to my uncle’s restaurant’ and I wrote back like, ‘I can’t call you!! I just paid for an hour of precious internet time!! But I’ll be here for 45 more minutes so tell me the address!’ he was online and wrote back write away and sent me a link to AIM express, so I got to talk to him in real time for about 45 minutes which was fabulous! His mom called her sister and he got me the address and his aunt’s cell phone number and everything I needed to go search for his uncle’s restaurant in Kobe! Erica also sent me a message while I was online saying that she could meet me in China on Wednesday!!! So it was a good hour. Victoria and Camilla headed back to the boat and Lauren came with me to find this restaurant. A nice lady walked us to the train station and helped us buy our train tickets and told us where to go. The train stop ended up being literally $1.20 / 5 minutes / 2 train stops away!!! So we get off and I’m clutching my little picture of Jon and the map with his aunt and uncle’s name written on it. I walk into a restaurant holding the picture going, ‘Makiko?’ haha the poor lady had no idea what I was trying to do or say so she took me next door to a man who spoke a little bit of English. He was super nice and called Makiko’s cell phone, and she came and picked us up. Turned out we were just one restaurant away!! Lauren and I ordered by pointing at the beautifully arranged fake food out in the front of the restaurant, and Jon’s uncle Shige made us some very good noodles with pork. At least I hope it was pork. We could not really communicate too much, but at the end of the meal Lauren and I were trying to pray and they started waving their hands and going, ‘no no, present!’ SO CUTE. So I said, ‘okini!!!’ and they laughed at me…and another customer in the store laughed at me too that time…and I gave his aunt a hug and bowed profusely. She started talking in Japanese to Lauren and my blank faces and then searched her brain and finally said, ‘see you again,’ and … it was just such a wonderful experience!!!! I got to meet Jon’s aunt and uncle, he hasn’t even seen them in two years! So random and cool! From there Lauren and I headed back to the original train station, dropped off postcards, stocked up food and pastries, and made it back to the boat. I waited in line for a pay phone for an hour, literally, and then talked to Jon for about 15 minutes. I went to go get on the ship and I saw Lindsay and Kat so I just got in line with them and we talked for a little bit – the line moved really fast. So soon we were all on the boat, I showered for the first time in what felt like days, and went upstairs to eat dinner with Lindsay, Kat, and Meredith. It was so exciting eating with them because we traveled really well together but it was hard to tell if we would ever hang out on the boat / after Japan together. I really like them all though, so I hope that we hang out more in the future. After dinner I went to Open Mic, where anybody can grab the microphone and say stories or experiences they had in the country we just went to. I listened to stories for about an hour and told my story of finding Jon’s uncle’s restaurant. By then, my body wanted to kill me for keeping it up so freaking long and my head was pounding. I popped some advil, drank some water with airborne and slept for 10 hours.

I woke up this morning and had to go to class, and then spent all day studying for my psychology test later that afternoon. Everybody is so drained! We’re all learning so much, but it’s in so many different forms. After everything that had just happened to Japan, it was a little hard to remember what I read in into chapters 2 weeks ago…so I hope I did OK. The classes aren’t that hard, but with everything else that’s going on, I feel like I am busy non stop. But I refuse to get sick! I am always either doing homework, going to meetings or classes, journaling, eating, exercising…really it feels like there is no down time! And it’s crazy, because we’re going to be in China in like a day and people haven’t unwound from Japan nearly enough…we like don’t even have time to get excited cuz there’s no room to breathe! And we’re supposed to read 40 pages on China and another 20 on Hong Kong and that’s just for one of our classes. There’s physically no way that will happen in a day.

Anyway, things are moving so quickly now! I can believe that 3 weeks have gone by, but I don’t know if I’m prepared for how fast the rest will go by. I’m finally starting to really enjoy the people I know here, getting to make good friends, and getting to Japan made me exponentially more excited to get to the other places! But it was like the fastest 5 days of my life, so I just know everything else is going to zoom by. Updates will be more frequent from here on out because we are just tearing through countries for the next month!!

Alright, well I have a million other things that I should do tonight, not sure how much of that is going to happen…and really I just need to go to sleep because if I were anywhere else right now I would be pathetically sick…I’ve just been running on excitement, adrenaline, and…empty. So yeah. Take care all, I’ll write again after China!!!!

Love Hilary