Ben's Colombian Adventures

Tuesday, October 31, 2006

Halloween Weekend

Happy (Belated) Halloween, everyone! I'm SO incredibly bummed that I'm not in Stockton hosting my usual Halloween night festivities. Larry and I carried on that charade for 4 years, and I know that Douglas Road will never be the same. Even as a kid, and my mom could attest, Halloween has been a HUGE deal for me. I remember making plans to decorate the house. I remember that I once rigged up a metal trash can with a pulley system so that when the front door opened, a ghost would pop out of the can. However, my true inspiration comes from Jeff Clark (remember my mom's neighbor down the street? The one who made me look like a complete jackass with the pinata?), who used to have, by far, the most terrifying house on the street. I can't wait to come back and do it all again. I'm not saying I want to go home, but I'd love to go back for just Halloween night!

Last weekend was a pretty wild experience. We loaded up a bus full of gringos and went to a bar called "Vinacure." It was probably the coolest club I've ever been to. Talk about decked out! This place had it all. The best part was when suddenly, we were all pushed aside and this circular spot on the dance floor became a stage for a bunch of dancers dressed as lions. They had this choreographed dance routine that was absolutely wild. They danced around the stage for about 20 minutes while everyone around them watched, then just as quickly as they had come on, they were gone and people could dance again. It was really weird. Their final act was a "Thriller" routine that had us all cracking up. It was a really late night. We didn't load up the bus until 3:30 AM and got home about a half hour later. I did my usual, "I want pizza!" routine, but can you believe that nobody was making pizza that late? Ridiculous.

The next day, I obviously slept in really late, noon to be exact. This is another thing I LOVE about my new apartment. I have blackout shades. In my old place, I had these totally transparent curtains (more like kleenex) that I think actually intensified the sun's rays and baked me as I slept. For the first 2.5 months here, I never slept in past 9 AM because of this. Also, I was usually woken up early due to some sort of banging on pipes, yelling by neighbors, or maybe even the truck that makes loud chicken noises through a god damn bullhorn, or possibly by the Dunkin' Donuts truck that would come park in the lot and play their little jingle, also through a bullhorn, for about 45 minutes. Then again, it could just as easily be the vegetable truck, whose driver would SCREAM through his bullhorn about the wonderful variety of vegetables he had for sale. At least he only spent about 2 minute s in the lot, unlike the Dunkin' Donuts truck, who acted like my apartment complex was the ONLY place in Medellin that would possibly be interested in buying donuts and thus had to stay until they were ALL sold. I think people bought them just to make him leave.

Anyway, after sleeping in the next day, I went to my neighbors' house. I haven't told you about my great new neighbors. Their names are Carolina and Jose. Carolina is half Colombian, half New Jersey...talk about a combo! She is an absolute trip. The energy this girl has could power the entire city for a day. She is, what you would call, "Off the chain." She teaches 2nd Grade here. Her fiancee, Jose, is a Colombian guy. He's really fun, too. They totally take care of me and make me feel really welcome in my new locale. I go over there often, for pizza, drinks, or whatever else we so desire. After devouring a double cheese, double pepperoni from Domino's, we decided to go to Jose's family's finca on the north end of town. Fincas are really popular in this country. Lots of the wealthy have them as a sort of escape from city life. Jose's place was fantastic. The pictures are posted below.

Anyway, that's about it. I've gotta run because the kids are just about back. Last week, I let them make report cards for me after getting their own. I got great marks, except in organization, but one girl made this comment that I "work" too much on the computer. Yes, it is hard work to constantly check 5 email accounts, write on a blog, and manage my MySpace account throughout the day. Tough work indeed.

Talk to you later,

Ben

My Neighbor's "Finca", Or Farm

The Backyard Of The Finca

The Sideyard- This Place Must Have Had 1000's Of Plants

Saturday, October 28, 2006

You Can't See Me

Military - The Team that Rescues Hostages

Colombian Military/Circus Act

Lower Elementary

The High Schoolers

Our Superintendent

The 4th Grade Teachers (Plus a Couple More)

Room 4B

Costume Contest Winners

Monday, October 23, 2006

My Street-On The Way To Parque Lleras

The Living Room

My Building- I'm On The Top Floor

My Street-I Live Beyond The Light

The View From The Living Room

Life Just Got A Little Better

This weekend I moved apartments, and I can't even begin to explain how great this change is for me. First of all, the apartment itself is REALLY nice. It's a bit smaller, 2 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, but it's got hardwood floors and granite countertops in the kitchen and bathroom. The front room is almost completely windows looking out onto trees and hills. I tried to take some pictures, but they just don't do it justice at this point. What you will see is simply a beginning. I will take more pictures later when I've got it the way I want it. From the moment I moved in, it has felt much more permanent than my old place. My last apartment was decent, but its major selling point was the view. Here, I don't have a view of the city, but as you can see in the pictures, I've got a pretty nice view of foliage and other buildings. Plus, what you can't really see, is that I've got a little river down below my place. Every night, I fall asleep listening to water flowing. Very peaceful.

The other great thing about my place is that I have location, location, location. I am a five minute walk from the best part of the city, called Parque Lleras. It's the nicest, but most expensive, area in Poblado. It's basically a park surrounded in all directions with nice restaurants, bars, and tons of dance clubs. It's the place to see and to be seen. You wouldn't believe the "scenery" there...

So yeah, I'm really excited about this change. Not only is it a killer apartment with incredible location, but I'm surrounded by young teachers. Even our bus to school in the morning is fun. No longer do I have to sit with some of the "senior" staff members and hear about ailing bodies, aches, pains, etc. This group is fun.

My new apartment is screaming for visitors. Who's coming to see me?

Friday, October 20, 2006

A Picture of Medellin's "Metrocable" Up To The Barrios In The Mountains

A Picture Of Medellin's Vast Barrios

A View Of The Metrocable From Below

This Is The Metrocable To Montserrat In Bogota

Don And I At Montserrat (About 10,000 Feet)

A VIew Of The Mountains At Montserrat...Typical Bogota Weather

Montserrat Itself

More Medellin Barrios

The Centerpiece Of The "Strongroom", With Some Of Its Best Gold Pieces...They Lock You In The Room For About 2 Minutes

From Left: Lou, Allison, And Sarah At "The Rock Garden" In Bogota

Sunday, October 15, 2006

Back From Bogota

Bogota has 8 million people. Do you have any idea what that looks and feels like? It´s completely insane. Our flight took off on Tuesday after school. It was a great day for the kids. They all had passed their multiplication tests in 2 minutes or less, we had just finished the first book in the series of Unfortunate Events, and the kids had earned enough marbles for a party. So, I decided to make it a day-long event and have a ¨Pajama jammy jam¨, where the kids could wear their pajamas to school and we´d watch the movie with Jim Carrey. They were so excited that morning; it was hilarious. They all came with their sleeping bags, stuffed animals, etc. and packed to the limits with snacks, sodas, candy, and tons of other stuff. We watched the movie in the morning, played some games, and then came back to class for a pizza party and dance competition...they totally sucked, but one kid HAD to win. Then they had Spanish, and it was great because they were super-hyper and the Spanish teacher, who I´m not crazy about, got a little taste of her own medicine. I did nothing to discourage their bad behavior. Anyway, that afternoon, we played some math games, and all took turns trying on the crown. I think I was the prettiest.

We left right from school to the airport. My friend Don, who is about 46 and from Teluride, CO, and I had a place together, but since we waited so long to book our room, we got stuck way the hell out in the middle of nowhere. The hostel itself was fine. It was owned by a nice couple in their 40´s or early 50´s, but we were really far away from everyone and everything else.

The conference itself was at Colegio Nueva Granada, which was a great campus, and seemed like a great place to work. I have to admit that when I got to Bogota, I thought to myself that I had made a mistake. My first impression of Bogota was that I loved it because it was so much bigger and crazier. After a few days of the weather, though, my decision had changed. No place can beat Medellin´s weather. Anyway, the conference was great. I went to two day-long presentations, one on cooperative learning, the other on brain-based learning. I was the typical ass-kiss in the classes, asking lots of questions and basically being the teacher´s pet. I think I annoyed some people, but they can go to hell. I was curious.

The third day, I decided to sleep in as I had been out pretty late the night before. I get this text message from Sarah, who I have this extreme love-hate relationship with, saying I had won something in the raffle of over 900 people. When they called my name, everyone in the auditorium was looking for me, but I was at home in bed. She said Barbara, my principal, looked pissed, especially since two other teachers from the school had also won something and were M.I.A. Isn´t that just my luck? The one time I win something, I´m not there, and not only that, I actually end up getting unlucky because of my luck. I think that´s the definiton of irony.

After learning that I was in trouble, I got up and went to the conference. Even though I knew I would be getting there just as it was ending, I figured it would be better to at least be seen there. Everyone, of course, had to tell me how much shit I was in, how pissed Barbara was, etc, but I don´t really care. At this point, I don´t think she could fire me if she wanted to. Well, she of course could, but I have my parents in my back pocket, so that would be a tough thing for her to do. As my friend Larry says, I like to start fires and watch them burn. I don´t think Barbara knows what to do with me. I´ll bet she thinks I´m more trouble than I´m worth!

Part of this indignant attitude definitely stems from the environment at this school among the employees, namely the elementary teachers. This is where I start my rant, and this is why I came back two days early from my so-called ¨vacation.¨

On Friday, after the conference, a couple of us (the less dramatic of the teachers) went to TGI Fridays, which was downtown, for lunch. There, I met this girl named Shannon who works in Cartagena. I´ll get back to that later. We had lunch, and then Don and I headed into El Centro, the busiest part of the city. I went to the Museo de Oro, or Gold Museum, which was pretty neat. Everyone else had already been there, so I ducked in by myself. I went down to the basement to start my tour, and there was this group of Colombian kids, probably middle school aged. One of them walks by me and says, ¨What´s your name?¨ Now, I knew enough to know that none of them really spoke English, but this was the class clown. I replied to him, ¨My name is Benjamin. What´s yours? ¨ He introduces himself, and then I ask him if he really speaks English, and at this point, I look around and realize that I am completely surrounded by all of his classmates, who are staring at me like a freak-show. I am completely engulfed by these kids, so I entertain them for a couple of minutes, trying to explain who I am and what I am doing there, but after a while it gets really uncomfortable so I bail. A bunch of them follow me for a few minutes, calling my name, but eventually leave me alone. That was entertaining. From there, Don and I stroll through the streets before returning to the hotel to relax a little before the big night out (not like I hadn´t been out every night prior, but this WAS Friday). I decided to go out with Jeff and his old co-workers for dinner. You could call this the gay man convention, becuase every guy there with the exception of Jeff and I, and his ANGRY friend, who I will also get back to in a minute, was not just gay, but FLAMING gay. They were all really great guys, but Jeff had said earlier in the day that we may all end up at a ¨club¨ (if you know what I´m talking about) and I asked myself why this particular group would end up at a place like that, and it just seemed ridiculous to me to stay with them all night. What made it easier was when Jeff´s friend completely went off on the waitress and restaurant owner when his salmon sandwich wasn´t to his liking. Everyone at the table was mortified, even me, who usually is the one creating the scene. I started text messaging Sarah, Liz (who teaches 4th with me, and despite being a total BITCH, I really enjoy) and the third in this trio, Mandy (who has been trying to find my blog for sometime now since I won´t tell her where it is). Mandy, if you are reading this, congratulations! I also suppose that you will be expecting me to talk trash on you, but I won´t do it, because you are one of the few people at the school who I really like, so there. These three girls are finishing dinner and are supposed to be going to a hip-hop club, which is good for me because it´s the one type of club I feel at home at because I can actually dance and sing along with the music. I leave the restaurant and head over to meet them.

When I meet up with them, Sarah, immediately after seeing me, says, ¨Oh, your shirt´s unucked. I guess you finally learned how to loosen up.¨ This was followed by, ¨It looks a little baggy on you. The line on the shirt should be on your shoulders.¨ These two comments were quicky responded to with a, well, I´ll let you guess. That was it for us. We were now ¨mad¨ at each other. Immediate awkwardness. Mandy tries to intervene, but I´m too irritated to play along. I am so tired of the constant drama and shit-talking that goes on around here that I could throw up. This school is full of back-stabbing. One day, a person will pretend to be your friend, the next day you´ll hear a rumor about them talking behind your back. It´s brutal, and it gets really old. People say it´s just like high school here, but I honestly don´t remember high school being this dramatic. I guess if I had gone more often, I would have related better. Anyway, we get into a cab and head to this seedy part of town where we stick out even more than normal. We go into this club, that was more like a dungeon than anything else, where all these 18-21 year old Colombians are grinding on each other and doing coke off the counter tops. We stayed there for a while, but I wanted to leave. I grabbed this girl, Nicole, who was with us and we headed into the trendy part of town where I had spent a majority of my time previously. The other girls wanted to know where we were going, but I was tired of the herd-behavior, which consists of a series of decisions and indecisiveness all at the same time. We get to this club, and meet up with the same teachers who we had eaten lunch with. And there, among them, is Shannon, who I promised I´d get back to. This girl and I completely hit it off, but like I said, she lives in Cartagena, which isn´t close or cheap to get to. We all danced for a while, and then retreated back to the bar. I bought her a drink and proceeded to tell her that if we worked together, we´d be together. I really liked her. She had, or has rather, a great personality and is really good looking. Plus, she´s a lot of fun to be around and has tons of positive energy. Obviously, it´s not meant to be, but if I´m ever in Cartagena...

The next day, Saturday, I get up and look over at Don, and say, ¨I want to go home.¨ At this point, I couldn´t take one more day of the constant drama, plus I was spending TONS of money. He looks at me with relief, and basically says his dream just came true. He couldn´t wait to get home for all the same reasons. I called the airline, which had a great guy who spoke English, and they changed our tickets so that we could leave that night, free of charge. We decided to go to El Centro once again so that we could ride the Metrocable which goes up to the top of the mountain to an old church called Montserrat, plus it has a great view of the city. Too bad that we decided to wear short-sleeve shirts, especially since once we got up there, it started pouring. We looked like absolute idiots. We stayed up there for about 5 minutes and then headed down. We went to a restaurant, Bogota Brewing Company, and had a pitcher and lunch to kill some time before returning to the airport.

When we finished, we jumped into a cab and told him that we wanted to go to two places, both relatively far away, but he agreed. Afterall, this kind of cab fare doesn´t come around too often. Immediately, we had a bad feeling about this guy. I thought I smelled booze when I got in. He wasn´t dangerous or anything like that, just an idiot. He got us completely lost. He had absolutely no idea where he was going. Don and I start to panic a little because we really want to get home. This guy is stopping everyone on the street asking them if they know where our hotel is, and of course nobody does. We spend about 30 minutes before finally getting there and continuing our adventure to the airport. As we´re pulling in, I watch as he passes an entire terminal, but figure he knows where he´s going. We get to the next terminal, get out, and go wait in line to check in. As we´re finishing up, he rattles something to us about where to go, what to do, and we just nod our heads and smile, pretending to understand. We get to the security check-point and go through all the motions, and everything seems fine. We get to our gate, and absolutely nobody is there. We show our tickets to another attendant, and she tells us to go somewhere else. We get there, and there are a few people, but there should be a ton more. We ask another attendant, who tells us we´re in the right place and that we should just wait. Finally, a voice comes over the speaker, instructing us to walk down these stairs and go wait on the tarmac. Now it´s about 15 minutes until our flight, but we figure it´s not a big deal as just about every flight in this country, and ours, is late. This woman is sitting there with a walkie-talkie and she is telling us to wait there. We try to explain to her that our flight is due to leave soon, and she just continues to tell us to wait. Finally, a bus comes and picks us up. We proceed to drive through the maintenance department of the airport, which seems really strange to both of us, but we assume they know what they´re doing. When the bus stops, we get out and follow the others into an area that says, ¨Connections.¨ The woman there tells us that it´s 5:40 and that our plane has left. Let´s just say that we were shocked and furious. We had been waiting in the international terminal, the wrong one, for the last 2 hours and nobody had told us, even though we had showed our tickets to about 5 people who could have helped us. We end up waiting for another 2 hours for the next flight. When we get to Medellin, guess what? NO BAGS!!! Just the perfect ending to an otherwise perfect trip.

This morning, I got up and rode the metro to the other end of town to ride our own Metrocable to the top of the barrios. I got to see exactly why this city has 2.5 million people. Those barrios are dense! I have some good pictures of Bogota as well as Medellin that I´ll ask Kelly to post on Tuesday, when school resumes.

Well, my tale has come to an end. My hands hurt from all the typing, but it´s been good to vent. Thanks for reading.

Ben

Tuesday, October 10, 2006

Miss Latin America 2006

The mother of one of my students...Miss Latin America 1992 (she's even more beautiful now!)

Monday, October 09, 2006

Soccer Mania

I call this one, "Come and Get Some"

Looking for the baseball...didn't find it

The "Campfire"

Friday, October 06, 2006

Buenos Aires, here I come...

I did it. Today, I found the flight I was looking for and booked it. Check it...

I fly back to CA on December 15th and stay there until the 28th. I have to make sure I can catch up with ALL of you during this short time. Plus, I'll be making the annual Christmas trip to LA, so that will take up some time. I hate to say it, but I think a few of you may have to come to Stocktown, rather than me spending half of my time back there driving around to various locations.

Then, on the morning of the 28th, I take off back to Medellin. I get in at about 8 or 9 that night, go home, unpack, sleep, repack, and jump on a plane on the 29th at 4:45 for an 8-day solo trip to Buenos Aires and surrounding areas. I can't wait. Buenos Aires is a city that I've been dreaming about since I first started entertaining the idea of moving to South America. This is like a dream come true for me. I haven't looked forward to going somewhere so much since I learned about Amsterdam.

Here's a copy of Kelly's recent email to me:

"Wow, you are going to be EXHAUSTED. Crazy family, crazy flights back to Colombia, then crazy trip for New Year's Eve. You're insane."

Yep, it's funny 'cause it's true.