Tuesday, October 16, 2012
trying...
Friday, September 14, 2012
You never realize how american you are until you leave america.
I've realized we don't need dishwashers in the United States. It's a lot easier and sustainable to just wash your dishes in the sink when your done with them and put them on a rack to dry. They never stack up too much and you never have to unload the dishwasher, so much more efficient. I also don't miss drying my clothes as much as I thought I would, my clothes dry in half a day after hanging them up. I miss driving a car but I don't miss Seattle's traffic at all and I don't mind taking the metro in the morning at all. In fact I love that most people don't drive in Europe. Walking around the old district of Bilbao today I realized how quiet and low key the city is without a ton of cars everywhere and especially in the old district of bilbao, my favorite part as of today, (I'll talk about that later though.) The parking garages are also all underground as well as the metro stops downtown, this definitely makes the city feel less cluttered and leaves room for all the beautiful buildings and parks.
Anyways on another American note, what I miss the most about America is the language... I miss hearing everyone around me speaking english and being able to understand what people are talking about. I miss speaking and not feeling foreign and looked at like I obviously said something wrong when trying to talk to people. I will do my next post in all spanish, I promise :)
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
Attempting to surf!...
hope to get some rad pics of my epic surfing skills soon brahs!
A seven flore club, what more can i say...
Driving through the basque country on the way to bilbao :)
Tuesday, September 4, 2012
Valley of the fallen, Franco and the civil war.
picasso, dali, and bug porn
This is one of my favorite Greco paintings:
This painting is in a famous chuch in Toledo and was not in the prado, but our tour guide told us the whole history behind the painting and how it told the story of the lord's death. The details of the painting were so precise and each person, even the audience of angels in the background, had a purpose and was usually a political or spiritual figure in that time. Being in the presence of it was really gratifying, it was truly beautiful and spiritual.
A few friends and I also went to the Reina Sofia museum which was really fun, random, and modern. Definitely my favorite museum and I would love to go back and get a tour of it. We saw Picasso's famous painting of Guernica which was also really incredible in person. All of Picasso's painting were absolutely amazing and made me really want to know what was going on inside his head when he was painting. The weirdest part of this museum was definitely the bug porn. (I mean, obviously it would be the weirdest part of any museum.) There was a film about two married beetles and a cricket, the girl beetle was having an affair with the cricket, the cricket was a painter and one day he painted the Mrs. Beetle in a "titanic style" on the couch, then Mr. Beetle came in and Mr. Cricket ran up the chimney and escaped but left the picture, then the Mr. Beetle came home, saw the picture and was very angry with his wife and they started yelling at each other. Mr. Cricket then realized he forgot his special Picasso styled hat at the beetle's place! So he went back to their place and Mr. Beetle hit him in the head with his painting and knocked him out while breaking the painting, then the Beetle's stopped fighting, Mr Cricket went home, and Mr. Beetle eventually forgave his wife and took her out to dinner and a movie. The end. The film took about 20 minutes and we watched it all just in awe of the fact that someone would come up with the idea of this animated film, carry it out with an old fashioned movie wheel, and then call it art. What a masterpiece. PS: I also secretly snapped a picture of this picasso painting!!(well secretly before a woman yelled at me in spanish to put my camera away, but hey i saw a few other people taking pics too.)
Thursday, August 30, 2012
A city of old architecture and modern fashion
To star off my long and independent year in Spain I decided to go to the capital city of Madrid. A city full of so much culture and history with every step. It’s hard to describe the atmosphere of this city, it’s so old and so young at the same time, it’s so busy and crowded yet so relaxed and chill, time doesn’t seem to be major priority in the culture at all. For example, when going out to eat tonight, the waiter didn’t bring us our check for a while until we asked for it, and for some reason, we were in no hurry to leave. We just sat and enjoyed the warm nights air, and admired the plaza full of your everyday spanish citizens riding around on bikes, playing salsa music and drinking wine. It was a perfectly relaxing meal and we were in no rush to end it. Also people eat dinner until very late at night here, around 10 even, they go out late to the bars and clubs and take naps (tiempo de siesta) during the day (sounds like the perfect kind of life style to me!) But time is a whole different dimension here, the day goes by slower and is filled with less stress and more laughter, I’m so in love with this city so far. Just having the opportunity to walk around this beautiful city and be in awe of the subtle way a busy city like Madrid flows, makes me so grateful to have the parents I have who have given me this opportunity with full love and support through all of the stressful agendas and financial obligations it has taken to get me here. Hopefully one day I can repay my parents with the same kind of gift of opportunity that they have given me.