Thursday, June 28, 2007

Lucha Libre


So much to write about—there is the job-side of things, and the travel-side of things. And within the job-side of things, there is the work & the students, and then the new colleagues and friends.
Today I was thinking—we encourage folks to be travelers and not tourists, but sometimes that nut is hard to crack. I talk to waiters & waitresses, I say hello to the security guards, I thank the store-tenders, and we chat with the taxi drivers. Today we caught the bus, with Tania’s enthusiasm for public transportation pushing us on, and what a great air-conditioned bargain. My Spanish is ok—pretty good to get by, but I’m hoping to do more than get by. It is coming back to me, and I am learning some new words—I think I’d benefit from a vocabulary list to study, because my brain needs to repeat things several times & see it in writing before it lodges there more permanently. And I found out I’ve been saying Chile Relleno wrong for years—I thought the n was an ennyay—can’t do the symbol just now. I asked Chris the photographer if she’d like to walk around and take pics together, and I asked her if we could chat about respectful ways to take photographs. She said that I really already know, that it varies by circumstance and context & manner, she said that I have the mannerism/respect, but it doesn’t always work out in a positive way. With such a power differential between myself and the people I want to take pictures of it’s hard. I looked up “beautiful”—linda or hermosa, because I wanted folks to know that’s why I wanted to take their picture, that they are beautiful. And then I ask myself why do I want to take pictures of “them”…what is it that I want? Am I taking something from them if I take their picture? I think if I take their picture and they didn’t want it taken then I am taking something from them. I also think that I want to take “their” picture because they are real people and not plastic models—I think part of it is that I want to bear witness to the myriad of ways that people live and walk through live and how the sun or the wind carves maps of their journeys into their faces. I am also remembering that I used to walk around Northampton and take pictures of people for my photography class, and it was much the same thing. Now though in Santa Barbara I’m usually not taking pictures of people I don’t know unless they ask me to, or if I’m at a rally. There was a beautiful woman stacking fruit with long black & gray hair pulled back in a clip with eyes that twinkled and an open smiling face. I would have liked to have taken her picture. I would have like to have spoken with her.

Acapulco is a tourist town, so that does add to it a bit. Even the German lady who serves us lunch (yeah, we went to a Mexican restaurant owned by a German—although she was super-sweet and cooked everything herself) warns me & Ray (one of the faculty) to watch our surroundings. So far so good. I did go off on my own a bit today to the supermercado, where they have 10 different kinds of Tang, including Mango Tang which I haven’t had since Malaysia. They also have Jamaica tang—I gave a packet to Tom (the assistant dean), and he ate it raw like a pixie-stick. In the market I got to wander for about 30 minutes. Big stainless steel bowls of mole are laid out at the deli—Oaxaqueno mole, others whose names I don’t remember but who vary in shades of red to chocolatey brown, including “dry” mole rub, a bowl full of a spice mix. Cheeses—not so many hard cheeses (Manchego from Spain, Parmasen from Italy are the only ones)—the rest are soft & creamy, or crumbly curds, all bright milky white.
The first day in Acapulco we went to El Zorrito’s, (the fox’s) restaurant. The usual $15 taxi ride to the restaurant for 5 (which later could go down to 3-8$, and once we got the hang of the buses, would have been .50 cents, but that’s the way it goes). Awesome food, chorizo sopas, silky lemony guacamole, cold dos equis beer, and ah-mazing chile rellenos—the best I’ve ever had. The chiles were spicy, smooth, and mellow all at the same time. Good stuff. We then went to the tourist flea market, which was just an amalgamation of trinkets in a maze of booths. After wandering for about 15 minutes I got a goofy octopus magnet—we call him Aca-pulpo (pulpo is octopus/squid)—one of my first Spanish-language jokes! Well, that was fun for about 4 minutes, so I wandered off to a side street where vendors were selling meat on tables on the sidewalks, and where, true to my internal cheese-sensing spidey powers, I found the local cheese store (really more of a cheese table). I snapped a picture, but as we cannot bring anything not grocery-sealed onto the ship, I didn’t get anything.
One evening we ventured out to La Perla—a restaurant overlooking the Acapulco cliff divers. The cliff divers dove at 9 and at 10:30. It was hard to photograph them, but they are incredible—they dive from a height of 165 feet. My pictures look like a little shrimp diving off of a rock into inky depths, (as does my video), so it was definitely something you had to be there for.

We went out to El Cabrito (the little goat) for dinner for Mario’s birthday on June 22nd. They served…little goats. But also amazing Oaxaqueno mole—I got the mole enchiladas—spicy, deep chocolate sauce over tender chicken in fresh corn tortillas. That was food of the Mexican gods. We also had queso fundido with champingnons (mushrooms) served with fresh hot hot hot fluffy flour tortillas. The food has been outstanding, from the chile rellenos yesterday to tonight’s meal, everything I could have wanted in my Mexican dining adventures! I did opt out of the little goat head specialty though. Maybe someday.

Air-conditioning—where even the air is privileged.

The last night in Acapulco, we went to Lucha Libre—Mexican wrestling a la Nacho Libre, the real deal, a hot immersion into Mexican pop culture. Tom, his wife Rebecca, and Ray all got tickets and Augustine (one of the lecturers here, a great fun 6 foot 4” Spanish guy) and I tagged along to see if there were still tickets available. We were in luck—there were 2nd row seats still available for 150 pesos ($15). We could have gotten cheaper seats, but those would have been up in the bleachers, behind the chain link fence and the barbed wire (really). It was an amazing mish-mash of rowdy teenagers, sweaty wrestlers in funky costumes with the whole head-masks, and families with little kids. Little cats were running around underfoot snatching up dropped popcorn, with what looked like huge former-wrestlers hawking t-shirts, cotton candy, beer, popcorn with spicy habanero sauce, and peanuts with lime/mango/habanero sauce. The big match was between Misterio and Los Perros, which the locals shouted repeatedly, along with “Otra! Otra!” whenever anyone got “slapped”. I learned new swears, and I learned that the first row was audience participation row as the wrestlers repeated threw each other into the crowd. Second row caught some of the action as well. It was pretty much the pinnacle of aerobic fake fighting but with real flips and body contact. Acapulco was hot, hot, hot, but after the wrestling match we left the auditorium and were happy to be outside. My description of the evening: “That was some crazy shit”. It was awesome.

Panama (accent on the last “a”) is tomorrow, and yes, this trip is flying by. I’m on duty the first day, we go visit an Embero indigenous people’s village the second day, and the 3rd day the plan is to jump on a train to the Carribean and spend the night over there.

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

No Mo' 12 hour meetings!


Training is over, and we hit the ground running. The RD's are amazing, and the students are great. I am updating this on the back 7th deck, drinking a mango smoothie. It's sunny & warm outside with a beautiful breeze, probably 88 degrees, and the water is apparently 77 degrees. Here are some journal entries from the past couple of days:


June 12th
It’s 7:20 am and I’m already up and showered. What happened to sleepy Lisa? I did take a nap yesterday & was groggy for a while. After 4 trips to the car for luggage & water, I’m feeling it this morning! I am so excited to be back on the ship—again, the smell of the ocean and the scent of the ship—whatever industrial cleaning supplies they use are pretty much the same ones, and it brings me back. I am so excited in general. I seem to be the youngest Admin. Staff (maybe Wade is a bit younger?). Truth be told, I’m also a teeny-tiny bit sad, which I haven’t said aloud, but I loved looking forward to this trip—and now that I know that it’s here, it will totally fly by leaving me like a junkie wondering when my next trip will be! I know, I know, I will be present and I will enjoy it. I just know how fast it will go, but then again, it will also be like a huge Super Cucas burrito, one that I can’t eat or digest all at once, filled with good stuff. Oops--I don’t mean to compare Latin America to a burrito, it was just the metaphor that came to mind. So today for training looks good—the basics, the mission, and later the duty/emergency stuff which I am excited to learn about, as that’s an area internationally I don’t know much about at all.
Our cabin is cute—we have a window out to the world and not onto a deck! Yay, we get to keep our curtains open without people looking in. When do I get my keys? When do I get into the office? When do I make up the training schedule for my staff? Ahhhh!
Other random Latin America Today (the core class that everyone takes) thoughts—the Storyteller & magic realism—I think this trip will be like that, some linear narratives and then lots of magical circular stories with deep Jungian collective consciousness. That, anyways, is what I know.

Saturday, June 16th
Again up at 7am—awake earlier and just not able to sleep as my mind kicks in and starts thinking. Today I have breakfast with the Admin Team and the captain at 8am. I am really, really liking all the folks I work with. Tom, Rebecca, John, David, Wade, Dawn—they are all great, and all characters. Tom, the “Voice” aka Assistant Dean, is particularly awesome—I didn’t even know this guy a week ago, and know I can’t imagine functioning without him! We did our SL presentation yesterday for the faculty & staff, and we got a lot of compliments on it for setting just the right tone. Tom said that even some students came in and were commenting “yeup, that’s true”. And again, I feel born to do this job! Although there are already some students, who are testing boundaries, but we're very clear on where they are. Anne, my Assistant DSL has a great style with these folk. It’s sweet having Tania here—she helped with the presentation & taught me more powerpoint at like midnight the night before.
Ahh, sleep—the gentle rocking of the ship while we’re at anchor in Ensenada—it rocks the right way too for us—side to side instead of feet to head.

Saturday, June 16, 2007

On ship time!

Hi all! I have been amazingly super busy. Everything is great--I love being back on the ship! We just had 5 days of great training. The Student Life Team rocks. We are in Ensenada now, and the students all board tomorrow. I will write more soon when I can transfer my journal entries onto the computer/blog.
Much love--
Lisa

Sunday, June 10, 2007

1 day

I honestly tried. I really did. I'm done now, at 10:00pm my time, but I really really tried to be done packing yesterday so that I could have a day to relax/nap/visit etc. It all went well, it wasn't really stressful, just very busy. I do feel very prepared, which is something. I'm taking 2 big bags and 3 smaller bags, and two of Tania's big bags, so I will definitely look like a diva. I did take a cue from my friend Roane who has done this trip many times--I packed my pillow and a down quilt. Seems a bit luxurious, but I'm ok with that. Speaking of luxurious, I did manage to find the perfect--and I don't say that lightly-pair of shoes--Teva Suntori's. I love these shoes. On another shout-out note, two of my friends who are graduating UCSB students, Jared & Cecilia, stopped by today to give me a gift--a really cool digital photo frame. I'm looking forward to putting my travel pics on it when I get back and having those just scroll through in my office.
Pause. Breathe. Envision.
I'm looking forward to being on the ocean, and gazing at the curve of the world--that is a strong thread that is pulling me forward. Santa Barbara to San Diego tomorrow, only 1000 zips away! My zipcode is 93101 and the berth at San Diego is 92101.

Tuesday, June 5, 2007

6 days

Kyla & Emma & their art
Wow, less than a week! Everyone keeps on asking if I'm ready--my reply is "I don't know if I'll ever be ready but I'll be packed!" There always seems like there's one more cool thing to do or get, and then you just have to go and realize that you don't actually need much! We did have the opportunity to play this past weekend--Tania and I did an art project with Kyla & Emma & their mom Jill. They are all going on the voyage with us. We made sculpey magnets--the ship's walls are metal, so magnets are handy. Here's a pic of the girls with their magnets behind them--they also made sculpey switchplates. By the way, sculpey is brightly colored modeling clay that you make into cool stuff and then bake.