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The Clog

This started as a blog about living abroad for 7 months, but the reality of getting a job has me talking about other topics while in between countries. (Above photo taken on return trip from Mexico, 2008. Looks like castles in the sky.)

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Friday, July 30, 2010

a letter to a friend in nepal


i don't know why, perhaps it is because i have lived in america my entire life, but i find asian and african cultures to be very interesting. i think it has to do with how ancient they are. there are so many layers to those civilizations and america is such a new country. so we don't have the deep religious tradition that other countries have practiced for years.

also, i would like to think i represent the american that most people around the world don't know. i'm educated and i travel and i speak three languages. unfortunately, what people see is the loud uneducated american middle - aged person with no respect (they don't even know they are being disrespectful) for another culture. some people think they can tromp all over and not be aware that people do things differently all over the world. i want to be more conscious of the way people live. as humans, i have come to understand that we are really the same. we all want to be loved. that's the bottom line.

nepal interests me because i know nothing about it. so does tunisia. so if you could enlighten me more about your culture, i would love it! i am reading a book about brazilian history right now. as i may have said, i was born in rio de janeiro and i had gone back to brazil 4 times before living there last year. i wanted to get back to my roots, because i was adopted by an american family when i was a year old. so i never really got any immersion into the brazilian culture. this is also an interesting culture to me because of it's blend of so many cultures. they are african, indian, japanese, dutch, french, german and portuguese, mostly. all these elements combined make for varied religious practices, types of food, different looking people, not to mention the size of the country! you get so many different climates and landscapes depending on what part of brazil you are in.

so i am writing a book about being a solo female traveler living in brazil. i thought i should do some research on brazilian history so i have a reference point for describing my experience living there. i wanted to originally do a book called "7 months" which would describe my experience living in different countries. the duration of my time in each country would be 7 months, the time i believe it takes to truly leave your own country and immerse yourself in another culture, to begin to understand how things work within that society. but finding work was a problem and continues to be a problem in under developed countries, because of the low pay and also because of my citizenship. i may be able to travel on a work visa, but i do hair for a living, and leaving the states proved to be very difficult for my career, as many clients had moved on. so i had to build my clientele from scratch. so there are financial issues.

my goal is to become a travel writer. so i have been reading a lot of travel magazines, which i have always done, to be able to follow and learn the manner in which articles are written, and who they are written for. it's a highly competitive field. but i'm passionate about it.

at some point, i want to travel to nepal. i would like to spend months there, watching how people live. i believe it will be mundane.... people washing clothes, going to work, talking on corners, just like they do everywhere. but i also imagine i would see things i have never seen. i'm intrigued by their tradition of burning a body after it dies and that you believe that "every human body is made by 5
elements Water, Air, Sky, Earth & fire. Once you get your human life with these
elements, when you are dead than you need to return back to those elements. So
we burn the body nearby the river." this doesn't exist in america. we just burry someone in the ground and everyone has a different idea of where that body or that soul resides.

i hope to take a ride on your elephant one day. he's cute. i always cry when i see them at the zoo. always.

Thursday, July 29, 2010

LIVING IN BRAZIL, THE STORY OF A SOLO FEMALE TRAVELER.

think that's a good name? taking suggestions.

neck hurting from being on the typewriter for hours. work, type, eat, drink, sleep, work, repeat. this all means something to me now. will it mean anything to anyone else?

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

wow. only in tenessee.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1hvaeHllwtw&feature=player_embedded#!

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

In the process of writing the book


I had no idea typewriters were such drama. I remember using them as a kid. I don't, however, remember making so many mistakes and having to use white out, then blow on it, wait for it to dry and continue typing. I also don't remember having to rewind the ribbon and every so often, flip the keys back when two pop up at the same time. Ah nostalgia.

Saturday, July 24, 2010

new favorite music


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TDiMe3SaLtE

virtualtourist.com updates

http://members.virtualtourist.com/m/77102/

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Kings of Convenience

how did i not know about them?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7NYwXSNZLpQ&feature=player_embedded#!

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

vtrank 1943 !!!! woooo!! movin' on up!

(that would be the world reputable travel website, virtualtourist.com
this will be my stepping stone to landing a travel writing job.
editing posts now for reviews.

some of the best dancing from christopher walken

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y7rseCwM9mU&feature=player_embedded

let's not rule out the fatboy slim video

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K7Ky5R-vxns

Sunday, July 18, 2010

new undocumented art coming soon!

can't find camera battery charger. need to buy a new one.

Saturday, July 17, 2010

art, work, computer, write, walk and eat.

that's all i do these days.

brazil book

changing plans:

i'm writing a book on living in brazil as an american female. i can't see it possible to go to 7 countries for 7 months each, living in each, and try to make a living moving around like that. if anyone knows a way, please tell me. i'm starting the book, but where to begin? i have all the info but it's about placing it in the right order, and having the reader engaged.

Thursday, July 15, 2010

yeesss!!!! but why are they playing abba?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KU1qSSZDPws&feature=player_embedded

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

my second favorite song of the year so far

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O3CkfvYMCWM


this typifies practically every relationship i have ever had. "you make me go oooo"

travel writing job

i had an opportunity to be travel writer... to be published. but there was something not right about it. when i went to their website, it didn't come up. so i thought it was bunk. then there are all these hoops you have to subscribe to being a writer. you have to do stuff i have never had to do for a paying job. so i called them on their shit and they told me they would find some other writers. some things were not meant to be. oh well. what a pain in the ass.

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

i found an old blog from a europe trip from years ago....fun to reminisce

hey there everyone!
well i have been in berlin for 4 days and am leaving for paris tomorrow. i started in london, then rome, florence, venice and berlin. i am having a great experience and a lot of challenges. traveling alone and with another person has pros and cons. this trip, i am traveling with josh, who i am seeing. today i got lost in berlin...a few times. i ended up seeing more than i would have if i did what i had planned. that's the joy and the challenge.


basic rundown:
rome is huge and there is a lot to see. we did the Colosseum, the roman forum, the pantheon, trevi fountain, vatican, oh, some other stuff i don't remember...it's just so massive.
but florence is easily walkable, tangled webs of streets and beautiful quaint little wood working studios and boutique shops. i went to the same places i did on the last europe trip, and even stayed in the same hostel. i just love florence and wanted to return.
venice is an artist's paradise of inspiration. the buildings are very very old, ramshackle, colored, with shutters and potted flowers outside the windows, just like you see in the photos.. the waterways give away a bit of a stench but there are bridges all over and most of the walkways are narrow enough to touch with both hands outstretched. it's really easy to get lost in venice. the food in italy is soooooo good, but there is only so much pizza and paninis one can eat. i had to do steak (florentine style) one night. i have been trying to eat the local cuisine in each place but it's getting expensive.


so berlin is surprisingly modern. i mean, you think berlin and you think modern, but i think more about WW11 and those times...we went to checkpoint charlie, went through the museum that has replicas and original cars and gadgets people invented to get through the wall (smuggling kids in suitcases, hiding in trunks of cars, digging tunnels underground, flying over the wall in a hot air balloon, etc.) i have been using the metro like a champ, after getting lost a few times of course. i walked through this really old turkish community that has the meat of "real" germany. i had a doner kabab. it was so delicious. we saw the Reichstag, the Brandenburg gate and did a lot a lot a lot of walking .... not eating much of their food. truly, the best food in germany is not german. we went to this beer garden last night and josh ordered a veal brat and it came in a pot of hot water....just a brat in hot water...and it was white. no bun.... it's just different. i had something that looked like 3 really long red sausages, 3 pieces of an unidentifiable brown bread and half a plate of sauerkraut that looked like mashed potatoes. it was pretty damn good though once i put it all together with some mustard.


so that's all for now. i will send a link so you can see the photos.. sorry, no berlin photos yet.




hey there
well, we left berlin and flew to paris. the first metro stop we went to was the same one used in the movie amelie! i was really excited about that. they actually have an amelie tour but i skipped it...i figured there were other things to do. but, we stayed in montmartre, where some of my favorite artists were doing their thing around the turn of the century...toulouse-lautrec in particular. we explored montmartre a little on foot and saw a nice view of the city from the sacre coeur. we saw the eiffel tower but didn't go up...it was too late. we ended up having to take a cab back cause the metro was closed. our cab driver was like a character in a disney movie...."bon soir, bon soir..." all animated, old, hunched over, dark rimmed glasses and gnawing on his gums. so cute. anyway the tower is really beautiful at night because the lights are all twinkling like a firework spectacle. paris is a wonderful city like everyone says. i can't say much for the people but the food is good and the intimacy of the streets take you out of that big city feel (like you get in new york) and make each neighborhood more intimate with its own character. we didn't spend enough time in paris. we gave ourselves 5 days but we really need a couple weeks. i went to the louvre, which is overwhelming and contains lots of renaissance paintings....i just had to go since i was in paris. but what i am more passionate about was the orsay museum, which holds an impressive collection of pre, impressionist and post-impressionist art. i saw van gogh, lautrec, gauguin, monet, manet, renoir, poussin, etc. that was really where the excitement was. you know, you can only see so many flying naked babies and jesus paintings. what a relief when people finally started painting what they wanted!


so now i am in madrid, and i will be here for a couple days. i have been here before...it's kind of just a starting off point for lisbon. we ate mexican food last night and it cost 10 euros ($13) for 3 enchiladas!!! they don't really know mexican food here in spain. in paris, you get that international mix, like if you want to eat lebonese food, you can find it....that's how san francisco is. but in cities like madrid where the people are deeply engrained in their culture (been here for generations) you don't find as many options. actually, one of the best meals i had was a royal with cheese meal at macdonald's in paris!! tres american!


i don't know if i mentioned it in other emails ,but carnival keeps following us everywhere we go. in venice, we caught the first night of it. in paris, it was just beginning. in madrid, it's just beginning. today, tapas and beer is on the menu. i'm going to find me some good eats and they're everywhere! people eat so late here. i don't know if i can wait til ten at night!

Monday, July 5, 2010

traveling

i've been looking at my travel photos and thinking, what an amazing experience. i have stayed in some of the sketchiest places, alone, and been okay. i wish that everyone had the opportunity or desire to do this.

"an adventure is an inconvenience rightly considered" says g.h. chesterton.

if only everyone could stop buying "stuff" and get in the travel mode, our world will be filled with open minds and hearts.

Saturday, July 3, 2010

the goods

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v3xwCkhmies&feature=player_embedded

WOW. since i couldn't dare put this on facebook....

http://www.funnyordie.com/videos/f75b50477c/finger-babies?rel=player