"There is another world, but it is in this one." -Paul Eluard

9.28.2009

Welcome to Uruguay

Phase 2 of my travels has begun... This morning I dragged myself out
of warm bed at 7:30 am to face the bitter cold wind and the chaos of
Buenos Aires in morning rush hour to get to the port. By 9:30 I was
all checked in for my boat ride, had passed through customs for two
different countries, and was comfortably seated on board an enormous
Buquebus- a mass transit type boat that runs between Argentina and
Uruguay several times daily. Though it was cold the river was
fortunately calm and we had a smooth 3 hour cruise over 'the pond'
as many argentines refer to the tremendous Rio de la Plata.

I arrived in Montevideo via bus later in the aftrnoon and was greatful
for my photographic memory when it comes to directions, bus terminals,
etc. I have been to Montevideo once before when I won a grant through
Lewis and Clark to do two weeks of thesis research down here about a
year and a half ago. I loved the city and its people and couldn't wait
to get back. Now I am excited to start discovering the unique culture
and to immerse myself into the daily rhythm of life in my new country
of residence! Tomorrow I will begin a self guided tour of Montevideos
yoga studios, hostels and language institutes to test the waters on
obtaining some type of employment and to get a feel for if my grand
plans are feasable or just pipe dreams...
For now, bienvenidos a Uruguay (via my blog)!!
-cate

9.22.2009

chi-chi-chi-le-le-le!

Buenos dias gente!
Pardon the gap in my postings. I spent the last week in Chile and had such a grand old time that I didn't find a spare minute to post... I arrived at my old host family's house last Tuesday night and immediately felt right at home- almost as if I had returned from a long excursion back into an old life. Though it has been two and a half years since I have seen them, I was welcomed back with open arms and a hot meal. I found myself sitting at the same kitchen table where I had spent so much time, chatting with my host parents who seemed not to have changed in the slightest bit. So warm and fuzzy was the feeling that I could not bring myself to tell my host mom, who had just served me a large plate of rice and chicken, that I no longer eat meat!

The vast majority of my week was spent hanging out with either my host family or the group of chilean guys that I spent tons of my time with during my semester abroad in Valparaiso (3 years ago! Yikes!). The guys were psyched to see me and it was so fun to see how much they had matured in the last few years. For whatever reason, they suddenly saw me as a bottomless resource of random information, cultural observations, and linguistic comparisons. Everyone was quite entertained by my now very argentine accent, to the point where it generated several interesting conversations on the differences between Chilean and Argentine spanish (which are countless) and Chilean and Argentine culture (which are also quite abundant). Even when I made a tremendous effort to speak as chilean as possible I was always inevitably asked if I had spent time in Argentina recently... at some point I just gave up. However, back in Argentina now I have twice been told that my accent sounds Chilean! I can't win... I speak what I hear! Anywho, I arrived excited to hang out with some casual friends, and left feeling like we had really come to know each other on a much deeper level. Though I did much less exploring and visiting old hot spots than I thought I would, it felt like a very productive and satisfying week.

There was, as always, a new group of exchange students staying in Valpo. One of them lived with one of my Chilean friends, and thus I was around a group of juniors in college doing exactly what I was doing exactly 3 years ago in the same place. Listening to them talk about their semesters thusfar, about plans, about activities they had already done, about their classes, etc, was so familiar that memories from my semester seemed to line up almost perfectly with their current experiences. I was stuck between feeling infinitely distant from that time, and feeling as if it was just months ago. Amazing how much has happened in 3 years!

My week in Chile helped me to repaint my overall feelings about my semester there in a much more positive, satisfied light. While I have always had good memories and bad ones from my 6 months there, I realized I had skewed my attitude towards the negative, leaving me with little desire to return. Now I find myself fondly recalling my experiences there, and easily recognizing the good fortune I had to meet such wonderful, magnetic people. And isn't that always what it's really about? What's a place without it's people...
Thanks for all of you who have been reading and responding! Missing you!

9.14.2009

foto-log

some pictures of the grand old city and my fellow explorers:


a colorful alleyway in the Palermo neighborhood


me, antonela, and ben after a delicious and very rare buenos aires brunch


Antonela enjoying the sun and palm trees after a lunch in Tigre. Tigre is a river town about an hour north of the city where the very popular weekend fairs draw people from all over the provence of Buenos Aires.