Thursday, September 30, 2010

School

Thoughts on current adventures in life:

School has started and it is delicious.

We are studying quantum physics, but without the calculations, so it's considered "philosophy of science." We've also been discussing why and how people learn what they learn, and uncovering that it often quite political.

Thinking back to the very beginnings of education, I remember my time working at a preschool with lovely kids and teachers. Many of the rules in place were intended to encourage the kiddos to interact respectfully with one another, and to stay safe. Some of the rules, however, were created to keep chaos from arising. For example, it was not allowed for a child to build a fort using the chairs, scarves, and blocks, because the scarves and blocks were two separate activities (and needed to be played with one at a time), and the chairs stayed at the table. Without these rules, the play areas would be a complete disaster all of the time. It made complete sense, from an adult perspective, but not to the child who wanted to build the fort.

I often wonder how much of my education in the past has been inspired by the desire to make it easier on the teacher and compatible with the systems in place.

It is with much gratitude that I begin this quarter at school. It is time to question everything.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Maine

I've left Maine, and will be finishing up some things at Evergreen. What a wonderful summer!

Belfast, our city/town, has its share of chain stores (even a McDonalds!), but there are lots of cool things about Belfast and Maine in general that set it apart from Anywhere, USA. Here is a little list:


The Mainer accent/pronuncination:

ar, and er, are said with a hard "ahh." One example (heard while garage-sale going), the word "kindergarten," Kindah-gaahh-den. Sounds like the Boston accent/pronunciation to me, but apparently, the "ahh" is rougher sounding here.


Lobster (lobstaah):

Lobster comes from the sea, the sea which is right in our back yards! The road on the way to Acadia was lined with food stands/hot dog stands, all serving lobster-rolls (lobster in a hot-dog bun). I'm sure if I ate lobster, I could tell you more about it, but, believe me, it's everywhere.


The Land:

Wait... what about the land? There is so much to say! There are more trees than there are people. According to wiki, we are ranked 38th in the US in terms of population density. And there isn't one huge urban center. Even if the numbers for Portland and South Portland were combined, there wouldn't be a city in Maine that reaches over 100,000 people.

This both makes Maine beautiful, and different! Our favorite aspect of this? Pristine wilderness is as close as a ten minute drive from the apartment. The things to get used to....? Driving! Although there is a lot going on in Belfast, many events and organizations we'd like to be a part of are all spread out. There isn't a bus system, and I imagine there won't be many bicycles with snow tires on the streets in the dead of winter. I am re-thinking my "I don't want to own a car until my student loans are paid off" status. I'll be in Maine for good after graduating, and will be either stranded or driving.

The forests primarily consist of evergreen trees, and house all sorts of wildlife. We've heard/seen lots of birds- owls, loons, bald eagles, wood thrush, gulls. More on this later, I hope.

Maine's coastline is swirly and curly, full of bays and peninsulas. Belfast is on the coast, but is in a bay. The tides rise and fall, the water salty, but we don't have the rolling waves one might think of with an ocean.

The (Belfast) Community:

.... is still new to us, but we have connected with some great people. There are lots of organic growers, crafters, and people concerned with the environment. Belfast houses the largest food-coop in Maine, and there are lots of fun events, like artswalk and wine tasting, that are free to the public. Also... people like wilderness trips! Maine is one of the few states that require a guiding license for those who want to lead wilderness expeditions. Everyone we meet seems to have this qualification.


The tourists:

A summertime survey of parked cars will reveal that every third license plate is not from Maine. The visitors are mainly New Englanders, with occasional visitors from states more southern. Because of this, art shops are able to exist selling their fancy expensive things, and restaurant and bed and breakfast owners are happier. I'm curious to know what things are like in the winter (which is quite long).


That is all for now!

Sunday, August 22, 2010

Connecting to home

As I crossed the border from South Dakota to Minnesota, the place I had spent my youth, at first, the landscape appeared to me only as familiar as a song once heard in infancy. Although only two summers had passed without a visit (but with a visit each winter), the land resonated with me as something new. In that time away, home had become an interesting concept. With a long moment in the finger lakes region of NY, a short stint in the berkshires, three months in the tropical rain forests of Costa Rica, my logical "home base" remained the temperate rain forests of the Pacific Northwest, and my heart was at home with my partner out east. After all the adventure, upon returning to Minnesota, the flat terrain and short, rounded, deciduous trees had become new again.

Life promises to ebb and flow with its experiences. Events and patterns appear in a cyclical fashion; when one extreme of any duality is reached, its opposite will soon follow. In this moment in my life, there is an explosion of movement. So far in 2010, I have set up camp in three cities in three different states (all which just so happen to border Canada). I appreciate this time in the cycle, mostly, as it quenches a craving for travel I have yearned for. Perhaps it was made easy by Olympia's transient-friendly nature. Living in Olympia, it's almost expected that you will leave and come back. All the details, like finding short-term subleasers, seem to work themselves out without much effort. Other times, the excitement is a bit exhausting. In the past year, planning for the next journey began shortly after arriving at a new destination, as I was traveling via. independent projects, and deadlines for paperwork would not wait! Overall, though, it has led me to find within myself a sense of stillness within the movement. Wherever I go, I am home, as my body houses my spirit.

In my wanderings I have noticed the tendency for the mind to grasp on to landscape, call it home, and identify with it. This observation first came to me five years ago as I memorized the latin names and medicinal uses of native Northwest plants. Hiking the trails became akin to visiting old friends (the plants). Every time, like a woman throwing her bags down on the kitchen table after a long day of work, something inside would surrender to the peace of it all. Those forests became home. A visit to Minnesota a year after moving away gave me the first taste of having found a new home out west; the trees looked so small and the forest floor so dry! What was "home" for most my life was now being compared to some other point of reference.

With every new place, until there is some sense of familiarity with the natural world, I am still just a visitor. Once plant books have been studied, and the nearby paths have been explored, however, the land moves into that space inside reserved for "home." No matter how comfortable I get in my own skin, there is always a hunger to include the natural world in my definition of "home."

Sunday, February 8, 2009

First post...

I have just returned from the city of Nicoya, which is on the Nicoya peninsula in the north-west part of Costa Rica. I traveled there by bus (about 4 hours each way) for about $12 there and back. We went as a group of 6, which later became 7. The people I went with- classmates from the Costa Rican Language Academy from different parts of the US and the UK (England, Holland, and Germany). I held the special talent in the group of only speaking one language fluently (English), and I became even more interested in working harder at my Spanish studies. So far, I can name a lot of things (mostly in the kitchen, of course), pick out words in conversations, but I can't communicate very well at all with people who speak Spanish exclusively.

The ride there and back was amazing. Beautiful countryside, mountains, hills, rainbows tucked away in valleys. The area looked dry, in fact, I saw some cacti (cac-tusses?).

We spent Friday at the beach and the remainder of the weekend in Nicoya, where the small-town festival was going on. The highlight of the weekend: Chirriche vs. Malacrianza. Chirriche and Malacrianza are names of the toughest bulls. In Costa Rica, the practice of bull fighting is somewhat different than in Spain and other parts of latin america. It is illegal to harm the bull (although, defining "harm" could be quite tricky if you ask the opinions of those who advocate for the animals).

The show consisted of a crowd of about 100 people inside of a ring. A bull would be released into the ring with a person seated atop. The person would stay on for 1-10 seconds (sometimes with no hands!). After the person fell off (or some stayed on until the bull had stopped bucking), the bull would chase after the people, sometimes charging, other times, running around confused.

The crowd of 1-2,000 (so hard to guess these things) witnessed people getting thrust into the air with the bulls horns (some didn't have horns), people getting trampled on, and people climbing the fence's pants getting ripped up. After awhile of this, three men (actually, the entire ring was full of men, except Inga said she did see some women in there) would come out on horses with lassos. The person that roped the bull would get an applause, and the bull would, seemingly willingly, go out of the ring.

This went on for hours. Our tickets were supposed to cost 4,000 colones, or $8. We ended up buying them from a street vendor after finding out from the "box office" that they were sold out, for 15,000 colones. I was certain it was worth it (this was the reason we came to Nicoya in the first place), until we returned to the fiesta later that night to find out the event was still going on, but it was free, and there was more action than before (less wait time between bulls). Okay, still worth it. I really wanted a glimpse into the culture in Costa Rica, outside of the city. It was good to observe, although, I didn't understand any of the announcers Spanish.

Back in San Jose I will be here at the language school for one more week before I go to the Limon Province where I will work at Avarios del Caribe on the Caribbean Coast in hot, humid, mosquitoey weather. Time has flown by so fast....