Sunday, September 28, 2008

Always Christmas in Guatemala....

So, finishing up the third week of my stay in Antigua, Guatemala, I can say that much has happened. Celeste and I moved into a local family´s home last Sunday and have been enjoying taking classes to review our spanish language skills. So far, our "pescatarianism" has been adherred to and we´ve had many wonderful (albeit unusual) meals in our new home. But I think the best way to really update is to cover the main drama in my life....the hunt for a phone.

I have had the worst trouble figuring out my mobile phone situation! First adding credit was pretty simple, but only a particular chip would work in my phone--the one that the store had run out of. So, I returned later and got that chip, but then they didn´t have the right charger. I would have to go finagle in the market to get the right charger for my phone. I knew I needed to reserve a certain amount of time and energy for that, but by then I was sick (I went on Cipro for 5 days because I got strep, but luckily you can get antibiotics over the counter for cheap down here) and then we moved in with the family and the rain has been incessant, yadda, yadda, yadda...


Entonces...I finally got the right charger the other day....and then lost my phone that same night. Yep, that´s right. Needless to say, it´s getting pretty freakin´ hilarious at this point ; ) However, I just found out that a friend is willing to give me her phone since she leaves soon to return to the States. So all in all it will work out and soon I can finally call my mother.



The house we´re now in is a nice neighborhood just outside Antigua. We have absolutely no idea who actually lives in the house since half the neighborhood seems to pass through daily. It is a loud, boisterous family--this last Sunday I was awakened at 9am (not a decent hour to be awake on the weekend) by circus/carnival music that pulled me into a daydream about living in a Fellini film ala Dolce Vita. The music continued however for 3 more hours.... The children are quite lovely, especially our 6-year-old friend Adriana who we are plotting to kidnap so that Celeste and I can sneak into the nearby playground to play and who is our main form of entertainment during meals. Mostly, we spend a lot of time guessing who is actually part of the family--we´re pretty sure there are four generations present, since the 16-year-old granddaughter is quite obviously the mother of the youngest baby--and figuring out what we´re going to have in our next meal....it´s almost always a mystery. But the family is very friendly and the matriarch quite obviously has an unusual fondness for Christmas tunes and decor(even in September), as well as the most expansive cow figurine collection I´ve ever had the pleasure of viewing.


I´m also greatly enjoying reviewing my spanish with my wonderfully patient teacher Mimi (I think that name is a bit ironic, since that was my pre-natal nickname). She´s great at building my foundation of skills again and testing to see my weaknesses and then strengthening them, but also she´s just fun to chat with as well. I love speaking with a fiercely progressive Latina woman who is young and proudly single as well--I also learned today that even though she is culturally Catholic, she considers herself just spiritual or agnostic, much like myself. I feel much more confident speaking espaƱol all round, even though it´s still a struggle to get the words out correctly, but people here are used to language students and are very supportive and appreciative.

Ok, this was long awaited for and now has gotten too long.....but more adventures are in the near future so be prepared....

Abrazos!

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Guate, Guate, Guate!!!

Here a few highlights from the last few days in and around Antigua....

Celeste and I climbed a volcano--Pacaya, which gave us a beautiful view of the volcanoes surrounding Antigua and also most of western Guatemala all the way to the Pacific coast. It was an arduous two-hour climb (just the uphill part)--in which many pueblo boys followed us on their caballos (horses) and offered us "taxi naturales" up to the top, I have to say, I was a little tempted--but once we reached the volcano's lava flows and beautiful vistas, it was worth it! Racing down (or rather, sliding down) a nearly vertical lava rock "sand dune" to get to the cooled lava rock and hiking up to the actual spot where the hot lava was flowing, we finally got to walk on the crusted over-layer to stand just above real live molten lava! With a river of heat and sulfur just below me, I could imagine what it might feel like to surf in hell. Luckily, before our shoes could melt, we headed back down with a lovely stroll through pastures and forest, stopping to pet horses set loose in orchards and dancing with mariposas (butterflies).


That night, we went to Takua, a bar Celeste's German friend Liza works at. However, we were there for her going-away party before she shipped off back to Germany. We had fun hanging out in a smaller group of people, where speaking spanish was almost a necessity and trying to explain things back and forth was always a fun interchange. However, when it was already late, Liza had her camera stolen by someone at the party she didn't know well, a friend of a friend. So, while we searched around she went to go look for her friend and the hour got later and later....finally, she got her camera back and we said our goodbyes in the wee hours of the morning.

Usually, it's advisable to take a taxi or "tuk-tuk" back to your hostel after dark, but since Celeste and I had no purses on us and were together, we thought we'd be safe to walk home. Wrong. Half-way to our hostel a bicyclist stop by us to ask "donde esta el after-party?" and before either of us could answer, he grabbed my groin! He tried to take off on his bike, but Celeste was too quick and took hold of his shirt and then the bike, leaving me to scream and slap him. "No molesta!" (and other non-quotables) were flung at him along with fists and feet by two very angry gringas....at last, when he was completely apologetic and scared out of his wits, we let him go. Tag team vengeance of the gringas. Overall, we feel safe walking together at night, especially since we've proved ourselves a force to be reckoned with, but we now also keep our pocketknifes at the ready just in case... Other than the small chance of crime at night, Antigua is pretty safe and feels much safer than many places I've been in Europe.

Saturday night, we went out to Cafe No Se--our local ex-pat tequila bar where we are becoming regulars--where many of our friends either work or hang out. Usually, if we can't find them there, we go to the Rainbow Cafe which has a veggie friendly menu and live music nightly (usually including local musicians who are in our circle of friends). I love that so many of our amigos nuevos (or at least for me, Celeste knew many of them from a year ago) are among the most talented artists and scholars in Antigua, but are also just cool people to hang out with. But going back to Cafe No Se....

So Saturday night we were visiting the artist/painters of the group at the bar and pretty soon into the night we heard loud singing coming from the small front bar. I went to investigate, especially since it seemed that a lot of the songs were American or British songs ala Beatles, etc. Well, mi amigo Alvaro was bartending there and promptly introduced me to the group of boisterous singers and solo guitar player, all of whom where prominent Guatemalan men or well-known ex-pats. One of the men just happened to be the Guatemalan ambassador to Portugal (and probably many other countries at some point) and was also very drunk, buying us all a round of shots before belting out his next song request. I offered up the next song, "Cecilia" by Simon & Garfunkel, but the Brit on the guitar said they had already sung it. Then, the ambassador suggested I say my name was Cecilia to get him to play it again. So I did, and danced with Alvaro behind the small bar (not an easy thing to do) and afterwards was solely referred to as Cecilia! Which then went to include every single woman present in the bar....muchas Cecilias...

The ambassador, Don Tono, is a local Bacchian fellow--if there is a place where deviousness and debauchery gravitate, it would be towards him. And yet, he is perfectly honorable and quite the caballerro, and by far the best dancer I've ever had the pleasure of dancing with (which is saying something since he's not only sixty-something but also usually drunk). He later referred to me as "Cecilia Emelia Dancer" and Celeste as "Devious Cecilia". This man is the most quotable character I've been around too--"Cecilia, what is your name?", "I have diplomatic impunity", "Young lady of the quicker shot"--he is a master at clever witticisms that are made even more memorable by the presence of a Havana cigar and Panama hat.

We saw him again at No Se on Monday night, the end of the weeklong festivities for the Dia de Independencia here in Guatemala. He remembered us right away, and thus started another fun night of dancing and memorable banter. And....we're pretty sure he had stayed drunk since Friday. But alas, this politically powerful man invited the entire group of us at the front bar to join him at his casa bonita to play billiards--a friggin' hard game to play, but I did score a point once! It turns out he is extremely rich (not surprising) and also breeds horses! Specifically Fresians and Andalusians....quite the coincidence since I used to say my dream horses where a Fresian stallion and an Andalusian mare! Celeste and I never fail to fall into luxury and fortunate incidents....but adopting a rich Latino grandpa was not what we expected!

So, I will backtrack a little now to Sunday. I had my first experience on one of the "chicken buses" here and loved it! You go to the open market and listen for men shouting, "Guate, Guate Guate!" (for Guatemala City) or "Chima, Chima, Chima!" (for the small town Chimaltanengo). For less than a dollar, you can get outside of the city and into the neighboring pueblos and a free amusement ride as well! The thrill of riding the chicken bus cannot be properly explained, but must needs be experienced for yourself. Imagine hurtling at high speeds up winding country roads with no barrier between you and the cliff next to it. Uh huh. That's what I'm talking about! So, we took the chicken bus with our German friend Andrea (whose Spanish is actually better than her English) and went to visit a friend I had not met yet.

Gabriel, a musician in Antigua, actually lives in a big pueblo outside town called Sumpango. He invited us to come to his house for the day so he could show us his pueblo and the "real" Guatemala (which is true, since Antigua is not really reminiscent of most of the country). Here, we saw his humble dwellings which he shared with his sister's family and met all of his adorable nephews and niece. These children are too precious to describe, but hopefully I can figure out how to post photos soon. Many of the photos were taken by the children themselves who are incredible photographers, especially since they had never used a camera before. The entire day was in espanol, since Gabriel speaks very little English and none of his family members did either. As gringas, we stuck out like sore thumbs, but only because it wasn't "the season" yet. It was nice being the only ones in the pueblo and getting lots of attention from small children and practicing our spanish with them. There was a traditional dance being demonstrated in one of the streets by a school, I think it was called "Conquistadores", since they wore beautiful colorful costumes and masks that vaguely looked like the Burger King head.

Wandering around a pueblo, speaking spanish, tasting local dishes and seeing how people actually live here--it was both enlightening and also humbling. I recently found out that the illiteracy rate here is 60% and that most families cannot send their children to school because they need them to help work to make enough to live on. The poverty here is immense, but the change will come slowly and many of our Guatemalan friends are hopeful that through there political and community work, they will be able to aid that effort to improve their country.

So far, this has been one of the best experiences of mi vida....and it's only been a week and a half! Ay, Dio mio!

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Soy una cosmopolita...citizen of the world!

Well, here I have only spent a few days in the wonderful city of Antigua and already I feel as if I have a second home. Thanks to Celeste, I have a instant group of friends (just add water...or rather, me) made up of friendly locals and feisty international students...or is it the other way around? It is una mezcla de bohemian people....artists, painters, intellectuals, scholars, performers, travelers and dreamers...I feel as if I've stepped into a dream myself by being overwhelmingly welcomed into such a group.

And also...today my backpack finally caught up with me! Yay! I have clothes! And so now I can figure out my cell phone, change my underwear, etc. Luckily it was under good circumstances, it was left in Chicago but the airline gave me 55 bucks, an "emergency kit" (aka toiletry bag) and Celeste was more than willing to share her clothes with me for the last few days. Still, it's wonderful to have my own clothes again and to see what I can live without for a few days at least. It's a bit ironic, usually I pack more in my carry-on, but this time just brought my purse and water bottle--this shows me how I'm rewarded when I put faith into checking baggage with major airline carriers....

Overall, I adore Antigua. Celeste and I have spent our days lazily wandering about the city visiting friends, hanging out in ex-pat/socialist tequila bars and salsa dancing with pros (actually, last night we were dancing in a bar that had Ignacio from Buena Vista Social Club heading the band!) The musica y comida have been highlights, but it is true, the people "make" the experience when entering a new city and I have been very lucky in that realm. Tomorrow, we head out with some friends at the ass-crack of dawn to climb the local volcanoe! Ay!!

Sunday, September 7, 2008

Here We Go!

So, tonight is the night. I leave Denver airport at 9:25 pm after getting a ride from Aspen with my friend Josh. I got to spend a few days relaxing in Aspen, CO with my aunt Annie and uncle Steve (including a great rafting trip down Westwater!) before being joined by Josh for the weekend to enjoy the wonderful alpine weather. Before Aspen, I had a 24-hour journey on the Greyhound from Reno, NV where I landed post-Burning Man.

How to describe Burning Man? I don't think it's really possible without being there. As infuriating as that may be for inquisitive minds, it's true. I'll post some photos later to attempt to color what an experience it was--as they say, a picture is worth a thousand words. So, until I can manage to adequately spend some time online to describe the above pre-Guatemalan adventures--I hope you are well and enjoy this journal of my journey!