Monday, May 7, 2012

animo


So it has been way too long since I have given any updates!  I can’t blame it completely on being busy but maybe that I have been exploring and finding out what I want to keep me busy.  Over the past month and a half I have been through so many ups and, well, naturally, downs.  But I am still doing well, taking each day as it comes…getting through each challenge and enjoying living by moment.

If I recall correctly I mentioned a few posts ago that I was enjoying the fact that I “finally had a routine!” well, shoot me in the foot. I actually hate it.  Of course, it’s great to have a stable income, but the everyday formalities, the same people,  and the same negative attitudes … it’s tiresome.  I have been stuck in a routine for only three months and I am already craving adventure and change.   Brazil 2013?  We’ll see.

Looking back, the last thing that I mentioned was that my friend Carlie was coming to visit from Buenos Aires.  God, that feels like centuries ago.  Anyway, it ended up being a beautiful weekend and it was great to see a familiar face.  It was exciting to have the opportunity to show her around Santiago and have her experience my so-called “life” here in Chile.  Although sometimes I feel like everything here is fake…like it is all something to keep me from taking part in “real life.”  But then again…what’s real life?

                                                 Carlie and I taking a walk down Santa Isabell
                                                 "Three Blondes Walked into Chile...."

                                                  Eating fresh seafood at the Mercado Central.
                                                             A night out with friends!

The weekend after Carlie left was Easter. We had a three-day weekend and there was nothing stopping me from leaving the city for a few days of fresh-air in a smog-free sky.  Fortunately, I was invited by my friend Seba to go to the “campo” to stay at his family’s house.   After having an extremely lazy day on Friday, we headed about 45 minutes outside of Santiago to a small town called “Aguila Sur,” only to be welcomed by Seba’s family and a bunch of our friends who had just finished a game of soccer.  We spent all Friday night eating and drinking, eventually falling asleep with full-bellies… in a state of complete relaxation.  Saturday was spent, once again, eating, and laying out in the sun.  In the late afternoon, our friends headed back to Santiago while Seba and I stayed…spending the rest of the weekend, eating and sleeping some more!!! Tough life, I know!  But I returned to work on Monday a new person… completely mellowed out with a positive attitude.



 *This is what we ate on Friday night.  It is called a “disco” and it was filled with different types of seafood, chicken, and chorizo…all mixed into a brothy goodness that we drank out of small teacups.   We also ate homemade empanadas made with cheese and jaiva (type of shell fish), dipping each bite into the spiciest aji that I have tasted. 

After returning from a weekend away, the next two weeks were fairly boring, just doing the whole teaching thing and getting together with friends.  It was also during these two weeks that I experienced my first ping of homesickness.  I think after spending a weekend away with such a welcoming family it made me miss my own.  Also, I think it is normal that after 10 months of living in another country you start to miss the people and experiences that make you who you are. 

As difficult as those two weeks were (thank you, parents, for talking me through it) I am back on track again and I am happy as can be. But after dealing with the emotional roller coaster, I, obviously, was feeling antsy and needed to change it up again.  So I decided to head north to La Serena.

 I have two gringa friends, Katie and Abbey, who I met while working for the Chilean government, and who both stayed in Chile for a few extra months to work and spend time with their “pololo’s, “ boyfriends. It was their last weekend before their return to the states so I thought it would be fun to visit them to celebrate.  Luckily, my friend Seba, also, was going to La Serena to visit family so it made the 7-hour bus ride a little less unbearable.

Well.  The weekend was interesting.  After arriving and having the opportunity to check out the beach and meet some of Seba’s family…I was off to meet up with my friends for a crazy night out!  I was dropped off at their awesome cabaña and we had a blast talking and drinking piscolas.  We later went out to celebrate the birthday of one of their friends at a local club.  The night started out a blast, dancing and meeting a bunch of new people…but, as it got later, …my verrrry good gringa friends…disappeared, leaving me wandering the streets of La Serena, alone.  Thank God for Seba and his family…who came to find me at 4:30 in the morning.  Not embarrassing at all… these things happen all the time….( or so I keep telling myself).

Anyway, the rest of the weekend was great.  I went to Coquimbo, a neighboring city to La Serena, to experience the fish market and eat raw seafood!  It was delicious!  I also met up with the girls for dinner to receive my never-ending apologies and to catch up a little more (I still love you two, haha!)  That night Seba and I walked through the city center and drank wine with fresh fruit. And although the weekend was not as planned, putting all things aside…it was really, really fun and I am happy that I was able to see my friends!

                                                  Taking the dog out for a run on the beach :)
                                                         A beautiful La Serena sunset
                                                                           Water break!


And then there was two weekends ago. Which was a 4-day weekend.  It was spent relaxing and meeting up with friends that I had been neglecting during the weekends while I was away.  I went out a lot and slept a lot.  It was nice to stay in the city without set plans.  I experienced a new place called “El Galpon” which is a local venue for concerts.  A group of us sat in Plaza Brasil drinking beers before the show started.  I saw cover bands of Manu Chau and Los Fabulosos Cadillacs.  Here is are some links to some of their music:




Overall things are going well.  Work has been extremely busy preparing for the “World Book Day,” but it has finally died down a bit this week. Just recently the hours changed here in Chile.  Now it gets dark around 5:30 PM and in the mornings it’s light around 8AM.  It’s quite depressing and without heat in the house…I’m going to die!  (I’m exaggerating, kind of).

This past week, I did something that I will most likely regret and karma will definitely come back to bite me in the ass.  But at the time, I felt that it was completely necessary, and yeah, I’m still not sure if I reallllllllly regret it.  But anyway, riding home on my bike from work, I had the worst luck ever!  Hitting every single light, I kept stopping next to the same car that was occupied by two Chilean guys.  After the second light I noticed that they were secretly “snapping” photos of me with their camera.

I really do not mind the attention that I get for having blonde hair here in Chile.  I always have my headphones on so I tend to ignore any crude gestures or catcalls.  However, photographs, come onnn..have you really never seen a blonde girl ride a bicycle before?  I was feeling saucy.

At the third light we stopped at, I was starting to get annoyed. The two guys whistled and when I looked at the car, they took a picture. The nerve! I got off my bike…took one step, snatched the camera from the guy’s hand (with no intentions to return it) and said:

“Ahora, quiero uno de ustedes” (Now I want one of the two of you)

I turned to my right and saw that there was a man passing by on the sidewalk.  And while getting back on my bike I grabbed the man’s arm and asked:

“Quieres una camera?” (Do you want a camera?)

and handed it to him….all while speeding away.


I didn’t hear a peep from the two slugs in the car…I am assuming that they were in shock. And, ok, I know it may seem dramatic and I may have handled the situation the wrong way.  But…I still think it was deserved. Ugh, whatever.


I have been spending a lot of time with a group of professors from work.  We are all “newbies” and like to keep away from the endless drama that our departments bring us.  We are always planning happy hours and dinner dates,  just last Friday we met up in Bellavista for a drink before we all headed our own directions for the night.  It’s such a diverse group of people.  A 40 year old lesbian, 26 year old soccer fanatic,  24 year old intellectual and well…me, the foreigner.  There are always a few extras floating around …but I’d say we’re the “core group.”

This past weekend was spent here in Santiago and again a night in the Campo.  This upcoming weekend I will be hosting a party for two close friends that will be traveling for extended periods of time.  Daniela, who works for Doctors Without Boarders and will be headed to Africa to finish her term and Seba who is taking a 3.5 -month vacation to Europe.   It should be fun!


One rant….Something that irritates me about Chileans: when they clear off the table to take everything into the kitchen to be washed…they stack EVERYTHING.  Stacking makes it so much more difficult to clean…you have two...extremely messy sides of the dish, and for some reason I always find myself in the dishwasher role.  The small things…I know.

I have written a book here so I am going to leave everyone with this:

I am coming (for the first time in one year) to the United States July 7-20.  I will be staying at my family’s house in Florida.  All are welcomed to come visit!

Also, I would love to get some updates from everyone!  Shoot me an email!

Sending all the cariño in the world.