Friday, October 13, 2006

Friday the 13th: the perfect day to reflect on life...

mood: well, if no one else is going to publish...
music: tres puertas abajo (um mumkin 3 doors down, tried to fool you into thinking i was listening to spanish music)
random word: butterknife


They say you pass through this life but once. And among life’s greatest paradoxes is, as your grandparents will tell you, wishing at eighty that you’d known at twenty all you know now and not having known at twenty just how much there was you didn’t know. But what if you could live a life within a life? A sort of accelerated life in which you are born and die all within the course of your natural lifetime?
I was born at 11:15 a.m. on May 13th, 1986. On July 27th, twenty years later, I packed my suitcase and left behind the life I knew. On the plane, nine hours passed like nine months, and as though it had been dropped by a stork, the rather large, white bundle otherwise known as a 747 drifted through layers of clouds and landed with a thud on the ground in a strange land. I was struck by the uncanny (yet slightly eerie) resemblance that the journey through the airport sleeve bore to the passage I’d made twenty years earlier as I exited my mother’s womb. I emerged exhausted, cold, frightened. The fluorescent lights left me momentarily blinded, and I felt so lost and vulnerable that I might as well have been lying naked upon an obstetrician’s table.
My legs wobbled like a toddler’s as I passed through customs, but over the course of a half an hour or so, I gradually re-mastered the art of walking. I spent the next couple of weeks learning effective methods of asking for help, ordering food and fulfilling other basic needs. I even completed a course in public restroom smarts, which I will refer to, for the sake of comparison as well as humor, as “potty training.” That is, I learned to locate restrooms without attendants so as to avoid paying, how to strategically hang my coat to keep shut doors without locks and to always carry tissues and hand sanitizer, since many bathrooms don’t have toilet paper or soap. The first month was filled with trying new foods, some of which made me sick, taking long naps in the middle of the day and crying at night. Finally, the linguist in me could fill a hundred pages on the topic of language acquisition, but suffice it to say, I learned, as a child does, the words I needed to function and found myself constantly surrounded by people correcting my grammar.
I entered next into the “school age,” where I started classes and learned how to handle myself in a new academic setting. Although I still clung to whatever mother figures I could find, I began to go out more on my own and make friends at school. I also started to learn “bad words!” After that, I plunged dramatically into a teenage funk that was dominated by rebellion, the search for identity and belonging, long hours on the phone, a boatload of angst and an overall emotional rollercoaster. It culminated in domestic warfare and me moving out.
I feel recently as though I’ve made it to age twenty. That means being independent, having a little confidence; it means college, essays and exams. It means dating and trying pot. It means living with other “twenty-somethings” and finding a community of people my own age. But most importantly, it means I can finally be me. I am no longer younger than I was before I boarded the plane for Uruguay. It means that my accelerated life has caught up with my natural life and I am now in a position to grow and move forward. It’s a fascinating opportunity, because next July, when this life draws to a close, I will return to my natural life only one year older but with all the experiences and wisdom of a small lifetime.

Thursday, September 21, 2006

Hello World...

mood: recipient of a miracle
music: la trampa
random word: luck


Hi everyone,

So I've basically been through Hell and back. The good news is I'm alive. It's wonderful to be alive. The bad news is I haven't the time to tell you all about it right now. But I just wanted to send up a flare from the other side of the world to let you guys know that I'm still here. Oh, and also to thank you for everything (whether it was leaving me a comment on the blog, an a.i.m. message, a letter or, in some cases, dealing with an all-out, hardcore freakout session that may or may not have left you wondering if I was going to survive the week, let alone the year). I can't even begin to tell you how much you all mean to me and how ridiculously lucky I am to have friends like you, because (and I say this in all honesty), I don't know that I would have made it through this without you.

Love and kisses and hugs that never let go,

Cata

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

skype shmype

mood: inquisitive
music: bongos
random word: scraggly

anyone who still reads this:

any interest in doing a massive skype conference call this weekend so we can all get together and catch up with those kids who are abroad? i don't really care what time. chime in with what works for you all!

Sunday, September 10, 2006

P-O-P-C-O-R-N, Popcorn is a kid's best friend!

mood: writing about things that make me happy in an effort to make myself happy
music: Abed Azrie (Arabic something-or-other)
random word: blue


Imagine how you would feel if you stumbled upon a deserted copper mine and found gold. That is precisely how I felt as I walked through the market and spied a small, lonely, insignificant-looking bag of popcorn kernels. I inquired about the price, expecting these kernels to cost a mint; I think they might actually be rarer than gold in this country. When I found out that they were only 20 pesos (under a dollar), I almost choked. I discreetly handed the woman the money (poor soul, she clearly didn’t know the value of her merchandise), scanned the street to make sure no one was watching and took off like a pirate running from the plank, my booty stowed safely in my coat pocket (although it would’ve been much cooler had it been tied to my belt next to my sword and silver revolver, but whatever).


Adventure #2: we have no hot air popper, so I wasn’t quite sure what to do with the precious kernels. I’ve been waiting for the opportune moment to sneak into the kitchen without anyone being there to watch me explore, experiment and possibly light things on fire / make an enormous mess (recall flan). At last, the moment arrived. I got home tonight after a long day of baking inside a tiny, air-tight (though not sound-proof) phone booth at the locutorio in the basement of Tres Cruces Shopping Mall, looking up phone numbers and calling various residencias (university residencias, private residencias, religious residencias, municipal residencias (not gonna lie, don’t even really know what “municipal means), residencias for students, residencias for women, residencias for men (oops…)). After about 20 phone conversations all beginning with “Hola, soy una estudiante estadounidense. Estoy buscando un cuarto…” I walked away with a list of residencias, most of which were full, many of which did not answer the phone or the phone number was no longer in service, a couple where I left a message to call me back, one that I’m going to visit tomorrow, one that doesn’t accept women and one where a small child answered the phone and started babbling something that was completely incomprehensible except for the word “Mamá.”


I came home with a bit of a heavy heart, prepared to open the cranky gate that begs for WD-40 every time you look at it and ascend the stairs to be bombarded by a wall of stale cigarette smoke barely covered up by fresh cigarette smoke and questions about where I’d been, to which I would respond that I had been studying and not looking for a new place to live. Instead, I found the house quiet and empty. I smiled guiltily at my good fortune. It was popcorn time.
I located a good-sized pot that resembled a cauldron, sprinkled some oil into it, turned on the gas, lit a match, placed the cauldron onto the burner and immediately leapt back to avoid being assaulted by the hot oil that was flying into my face. I scrambled to open the bag of kernels, dumped an unidentifiable amount into the cauldron, slammed the lid on and prayed. Within about a minute, I started to hear what at first I thought were angels calling my name from the Heavens. For a moment, I thought the house had exploded and I was dead. Then, I realized that sweet sound was none other than the popping of popcorn. I couldn’t believe it; I was making popcorn in Uruguay!


One tablespoon of melted butter and a pinch of something that might have been sea salt later, I was sitting in my room savoring the taste of popcorn and writing about it. It has been far too long and about the only thing that could make me happier than this popcorn right now would be a hug. But since the people here don’t hug, that’s going to be harder find than gold in a barren copper mine. So for now I’ll stick to my popcorn.

Skype?

mood: homesick
music: Inti-Illimani
random word: bloop


Dear friends,

I miss you lots. I really wish I had been in Proctor with you all tonight scooping extra peanut-butter chips onto my Sunday Sundae. I want Kevin to be the reason I'm not getting any work done and Michael to be the one pouring me tea and Ben to be the only source of awful pick-up lines and innuendos and Dan to be the one teaching me to dance. Can we all have a big Skype date soon?

Love,
Laura

Monday, September 04, 2006

Chile + musicals = !!!!

mood: anxious!
music: Astor Piazolla
random word: bodeguero


So, it has just come to my attention that there is a Chilean musical ABOUT Valparaíso called La pérgola de las flores playing IN Valparaíso this weekend. It clearly being IMPERATIVE that I get myself a ticket, I am now hopping on a bus to the Teatro Municipal. Some website said something about needing to get invitations like...a week ago...*crosses fingers really really hard*

I'm off. Wish me luck!

EDIT: Blast! Agotado. ("Agotado" evidently means "sold out," which I found out through the following awkward conversation: "I'd like to get a ticket to La pérgola de las flores." "Ah, La pérgola de las flores is sold out." "Ah, great, so where can I get the ticket?" Um, whoops.) So I bought myself two boxes of cookies and a big honking jug of kiwi juice to make myself feel better, and my host-dad promised to rent me the movie. Sniffle.

Saturday, September 02, 2006

Toying with boys' hearts

mood: Evil
music: Melissa Etheridge
random word: curmudgeonly


So, I'm talking again with okcupid boy. He's all sad that I'm heading up to Vermont in a couple of days, while I'm just kinda torturing him by alternately flirting and acting indifferent. And now I just have to share my obnoxiousness with you all.

SilverMasque906 (1:03:47 AM): im never gonna get to meet you, with you going off to school so early
SilverMasque906
(1:05:34 AM):
and its not my fault you have to leave
SilverMasque906 (1:05:39 AM): so its your fault
Quoth Tiberius (1:05:53 AM): but it isn't my fault I was given those beans
SilverMasque906 (1:06:04 AM): oh god
Quoth Tiberius (1:06:05 AM): you persuaded me to trade away my cow for beans
Quoth Tiberius (1:06:31 AM): and without those beans there'd've been to stalk to get up to the giant in the FIRST place!
SilverMasque906 (1:06:38 AM): youre so done

Y'know, it's behaviour like this that really kinda warrants my bachelorhood.

... hey, where am I going, and why am I in this handbasket?

Sunday, August 27, 2006

Springtime in Montevideo (we got a preview the other day and it was lovely...)

mood: sadder now than I was when I wrote this
music: a certain mix made by a very special friend
random word: memory
Springtime
I always thought
was red robins and daffodils
green grass
buds on bare branches
and lemonade.

Springtime
it seemed to me
would be the same almost anywhere.

As it turns out
Spring, like so many things here
has a bit of a different flavor in Montevideo.

It’s not the crocus breaking through the last velvet sheet of frost
but rather the bum emerging from behind his plastic tarp
carefully folding it to store away for the day
and with any luck, until next winter.

It’s not the seasonal allergies that stop up your sinuses
but the pedestrians strolling at a more leisurely pace than usual
leaving the sidewalks congested.

It’s watching the omnibus go by
without swallowing pangs of jealousy
because all those people are warmer than you.

It’s bicycles passing more slowly
no longer struggling to race the cold home.

It’s the antagonistic wind
that yesterday threatened to tear the scarf from your face
lulling to a breeze and
like a playful kiss
gently brushing the hair back from your eyes.

It’s wanting to burn jasmine incense
instead of cedar and sandalwood.

It’s the clunking of leather boots on brick crosswalks
giving way to the sprightly clicking of stilettos and sandals.

It’s the smell of shellac in the street
as you walk by the old carpenter
painting his cabinets on the sidewalk outside his shop.

It’s the almost forgotten sensation
of sweat on your shoulder
beneath the strap of your canvas bookbag.

It’s sitting outside at a café beside the plaza
ordering a peach milkshake instead of hot chocolate
and counting the signs of Spring in Montevideo.

Tomorrow, Tomorrow!!

mood: anxious, nervous, excited, happy, scared, ecstatic, but mostly just crazy.
music: i currently have my ipod on random through every song so that i drain my battery and then can hopefully recharge it to its fullest potential (fullest potential hopefully being one flight from NYC to Moscow)
random word: wrinkle

Ok, guys. I leave tomorrow. Oh me, oh my.

So, the normal question would be "Have you packed yet?" and, of course, the answer is a resounding "No." Well, ok, not all hope is lost. For the past 3 days I've had all my clothes strewn about the living room floor. As of yesterday, they're in piles at least, and I've pretty much figured out what I'm taking. I just have to put them all in my two suitcases and then figure out how much room is left for all the other junk. All I know is that I've still got at least 5 boxes in the garage from when I moved out of Midd in May. I have no idea what is in all those boxes, and most likely not all of it is going to come to Moscow with me. But, I mean, what is in all those boxes? Why did I need it at Midd, but now when I have to spend a year away from home, I suddenly don't need it? Well, we'll only find out when I go through them today. It's going to be an exciting day.

The only real purpose of this post is that I want to talk to you all before I leave. Either call my cell, or my house (because my cell doesn't work at home) which is 518-729-4895. Or, obviously, if you don't, I shall call you. :) I'm leaving for a year, guys. A YEAR! Oh dear...I'm going to get going on that whole packing thing. Gaaaahhhhhh!