First thing today I bumped into my friend Pablo in the kitchen and he said something to the effect of, “What’s your plan for today? I’m sure you’ve got something going on, you always do!” And I thought, YIKES, I’ve already managed to establish this reputation in 4 weeks of living in a foreign country. And in a foreign country where “go, go, go” isn’t exactly the traditional lifestyle. This past week I haven’t even left myself the time to write a blog. After this conversation in the kitchen, I decided to plant myself on the back porch with my book and my journal and spend the day doing nothing in particular. Running from place to place and activity to activity is not the way I want to spend a year in
-For the past 4 weeks, I’ve been taking 20 hours/week of group Spanish classes. I’m done now, but I’m still going to continue taking private lessons with my really fabulous teacher, Florencia. If anyone decides to come to
-I got a job with an American company called VivaTranscriptions. Basically, doctors send in audio dictations and this company hires out people to transcribe them. I’m not transcribing (thank god), I’m just correcting the dictations. Though I’m sure it will be about as boring as it gets, it’s perfect for me because it’s so flexible! I can work as many or as few hours per week as I fancy, and I can travel! I can do my job from somewhere else, or I can pass up work for any given amount of time. The office, peopled by 20 and 30-something-aged American dudes, is very laid back and friendly. I start tomorrow. PERFECTO!
-I don’t need to run down all of my nighttime exploits, but I will say a few things. I’ve now gone to 2 different places which are bars/restaurants/parties inside someone’s house. It’s really a spectacular thing! The food is great, the atmosphere colorful, and the entertainment extraordinary! At one place, we ended up dancing to a 4 piece live band comprised of Spanish guitar, trumpet, trombone and vocals. The musicians jumped up and down in the middle of the room while people danced around them. They played and sang their hearts out—after just one song they were all sweating profusely. At one point the trombone player actually crashed right into me. The energy in the room could’ve knocked me over if he hadn’t. That night it sunk in that I’m not in
A tremendous modern tango band played at the other house/restaurant hybrid. I mean FABULOUS! Really, there’s nothing like finding yourself in a tiny room with this kind of thing! In
Earlier in the week I met a guy named Marcelo who told me that he plays for a progressive rock band. When I was able to list off a couple of his influences he jumped from his chair, hugged me, and I was his new best friend. He told me to come to his show Saturday night, so I got a group of friends together and went. It was AWESOME! The show was in a theater, and everyone stayed seated the whole time. The singer could wail, the guitarist could shred, and my buddy Marcelo could really rock those keys! Apparently this group, Fughu, opened for Dream Theater when they played in
Maria and her friends started a soccer team in a women’s league, and she invited me to join. We play on Saturdays, and we stink to high heaven. But it’s great to get out and run around. We won our first game 8-0 because our opposition, uniformed in pink tank tops, was just about as girly as it gets. I could have broken any one of them in half with my left pinky toe. And my right pinky toe is definitely the dominant one. Yesterday we faced far more formidable opponents and lost 2-3. Go Mediapila! (Go Half-Battery!)
What I Think I’ve Learned About Argentina #3:
- People here love to talk about politics!
- People here love to ask you how old you are! (And for some reason, most people think I’m about 5 years younger than I am).
- People here talk excitedly about all kinds of future plans, but only about 10% actually come to pass. I’ve learned not to count on anything, and not to get my feelings hurt when someone doesn’t follow through. I think it’s rude to say “no” here so everyone just says “yes” to everything, often with no real intention behind it.
1 comment:
I love your stories! Keep 'em coming.
Post a Comment