Sunday, January 24, 2010

Do you know who sings this? Adventures in Australia and New Zealand





“Do you know who sings this?” asked our not so Australian balding taxi driver on our last night in Sydney. It was 2:30 AM, we were four Armenian girls with swollen feet and thumping heads from the terrible techno rave music that we had been listening to for the past 3 hours while 15 year old boys shimmied around us.

“Frank Sinatra?” I guessed, knowing I was right. I had heard the jazzy blues song before, before the stupid electronica unts unts unts had been beaten into my head and I couldn’t think as civilly as I would have liked. I was being nice to the poor taxi driver hauling our sad looking selves to our final destination, but all I really wanted was to get to the house and feel the sweet release of taking off the clogs I had been wearing all night, trying to impress God-knows who….or what. It was our last night in Australia and my mind was beginning to fade back to real life.

But then there was a pause.

“No!” He exclaimed, making my head spin for a moment, “It’s ME!” He said this in the excitement as if he had just found that out for the first time too. “It’s me singing. I am a singer. Here is my CD!”

At that instant, my grogginess and soreness disappeared as our vibrant Ukrainian taxi driver began to belt out “New York New York” out the window on that humid Australian summer night. The louder he got, the more awake we became, clapping, singing, and even attempting to cancan in the back seat.

He went on to explain how he was a grand singer back in the Ukraine and how difficult the transition had been to singing in English in Australia. “But I do have a show coming up soon, I am getting bigger. My name is Zachary…”

……

And this is why I travel.

Welcome to my life. The Armenian wanderer’s life.

This is my story. More specifically, this is my story about my travels to Australia and New Zealand. This is my story about falling in love, my story about adrenaline, about adventures that even I could never have made up myself.

Warning: This is a VERY long blog post and if you make it all the way through, BRAVO! If not, take a meander at the pics of my adventures and as always, write me a comment and maybe, just maybe, we can all be friends.

…………………….

Sydney, Australia December 26,2009

I arrived in Sydney the day after Christmas and was welcomed warmly by my cousin and three friends who had flown in earlier from LA, equipped with Santa hats, hugs, and of course the stormy weather that we seem to unintentionally pack on every trip we go on. We were welcomed into the home of a loving Armenian mother and daughter and after having been in Taiwan for six months, eating Armenian food and being surrounded by “my people” warmed my little Asian heart.

The five of us, Evelina, Karine, Jackie, Luiza, and I spent a few days in Sydney, exploring, getting lost, enjoying the Australian accent and the constant, “cheers mate” as a reply for pretty much anything. How do you respond to that? “You’re welcome? No problem? Checkmate?” Meh. I just smiled.

The next few days were, for me, a transitional culture shock period as I accustomed to seeing the “whyguo” what the Taiwanese call foreigners or literally translated “white people”. I was not used to seeing so many “foreigners” and hearing so much English and it kind of freaked me out for a while, trying not to stare at every white boy or eavesdrop on every conversation just because I could understand.

So frolicking through Sydney brought its own adventures, as many adventures as six Armenian girls can run into. We danced, we walked, we took jumping photos, and we waited for the sun to come out. It didn’t. So we went to Melbourne where we could test our weather luck again.

Melbourne, Australia December 28,2009....or 27th?...I'm confused

It's 5:00 in the morning. Flight is at 6:30. We arrive at the airport. Say our Goodbyes. Go to the self check-in counter. Hmmm? too early to check-in you say? OK. We will wait.6:00 AM, still to early to check in you say? How is that if our flight leaves in half an hour?....oh, wait what? We are too early? Yes, just a little bit, only 24 hours too early to be exact. At the airport on the wrong day, we contemplated sleeping in the airport, paying twice the amount of the original ticket to fly out at that moment, or getting a room for 3 at the cheap airport hotel next to the Krispy Kreams where our borrowed rainbow umbrella got thrashed and tattered in the storm we got stuck in, only having packed clothes for a sunny summer vacation....

Comprendes?

Either way, one of those days, we finally made it to Melbourne and this time the sun finally made a guest appearance.…but all too quickly. We, and when I say we, I mean, “I”, got crisped by the sun. I got Taiwan red, and immediately started peeling, so attractive I was. I made do with my new look as we ventured through their version of a night market (which is exactly the same as the ones here in Taiwan), ate delicious Greek food (go figure), and as we finally got to spend Christmas the Australian way, basking under the sun in our Santa hats.

Making the metro driver hold the train for us as we ran down the ramp, walking all over the city in high heels looking for a dance club that had been right next to our hotel, sipping champagne on black tattered leather couches at a rave club avoiding talking to a sweaty Latvian boy with his shirt tucked in his back pocket while my cousin twirled around the empty dance floor at 4 AM….well these are just the beginning of my adventures.

Sydney December 31, 2009

Zoo

Real Australian Kangaroo. They don't make em like that anymore.

I think they are being a little over dramatic.

Cutest little guy.

One of the largest crocodiles ever. He killed two of his previous mates and lives all alone now. Sad little guy.

Now on to New Year's Eve

OOOohh, New Year’s Eve 2009, Thank you for all the lifetime full of memories you have provided me with. I am forever indebted. Yours truly, Anna.

Now, there is much I cannot say about that night, but I can give you a glimpse. Picture this. It is my cousin’s birthday, so of course we are going to celebrate her and give her a bit extra to drink and be merry. Somehow when we got to the club that we had reserved months in advance, we were all a bit too merry.

Enjoying ourselves at the empty hub, we did what girls do best when they are together; we took pictures of ourselves, hugged and said, “I really do love you, so much”, and scanned the place for guys to talk to. In the midst of our scanning and mingling, the security at the club got suspicious of our merriness.

With a huge grin on my cousin’s face that spoke of a life thoroughly lived and a night already enjoyed, security escorted her out of the club. Not one to ever miss an adventure like this, Jackie and I went out with her and even at this point, I knew that what I had here was a story to tell her grandchildren. We decided to sober up a little by walking around and dancing in the streets and when the time felt right, we decided to try again at our previous location to rejoin our group of friends.

Security did not buy it. “Take another walk around the block,” he said.

That was enough to cause the sequel to this story, “The Revenge of the Evelina”. Sure we were a little wobbly, and our smiles couldn’t hide our true feelings, but it was her birthday and we were causing no sort of trouble. I thought it was pretty funny, but Eva for some reason did not. With tears over her face and anger over her eyes, I am sure the club will be shut down in a few months. I have always wanted to know what it feels like to be kicked out of a place, you know, maybe check off one of my “100 things to do before I die” list. But her story will have to do.

Finally meeting up with all the girls, we walked to the fireworks show, admired the spectacular spectacular (or what each of us saw), and Eva, Luisa, and Karine spent the rest of the night walking the city looking for a taxi while Jackie and I had our own adventures. All getting home at the same time, around 5 in the morning, we lay on one bed, laughing about our lives, about how somehow we had ended up being all together in Australia on New Year’s Eve 2009.

And that is how we brought in the New Year, uncomfortably sprawled on one bed in our fancy dresses, laughing. Perfect.

Auckland, New Zealand January 1, 2010

If this is love. If this is loooooveeeee.

What did we NOT experience in New Zealand?

So not to be rude, but while you were probably sitting at work counting numbers and the hours until lunch, or unintentionally watching American Idol (or whatever show is popular these days), or just sitting on the toilet contemplating your life….

I was:

Free Falling from 12,000 feet from a tiny airplane, looking like an egg head screaming for dear life;






Repelling down the side of a mountain along a waterfall, lowering myself down by one rope;

Strapping on white plastic shoes to be able to walk in the dark caves 600 ft. underground and inner tube underneath glowworms that appear to be the sweet touches of God’s lights (though it is their poop that glows);

Driving a giant ATV, guided in the jungles and breathtaking countryside by a native Mauri tribesman whose family has lived on the land for 800 years;






And finally, rolling down a hill in a ball with my cousin. No explanation needed there because all I remember is laughing until my throat was sore and my face distorted.

Basically I fell in love with the vast green hills, the peace that comes with the people that live in that kind of simplicity and the beauty of the whole country and everything it stands for. So here is my love letter to NZ, or to our mulleted tour guide in the Waitomo caves where he serenaded us while we drifted on our romantic inner tubes.

Dear country/mullet boy,

I had traveled and seen much of the world, but I never understood true living until I met you. Thank you for making my heart beat faster than anyone ever could, for making my adrenaline force bravery upon me, for allowing me to pee in the wet suites though we were specifically told not to, and for just being the peacefulness that you are.

You are quirky and for that and for all the adventures we had together, I will remember you and will one day come back to you as many lovers promise to one another.

So wait for me, as I will for you. Stay green, uninhabited, beautiful, and foxy. I love you. Yours Truly.

We had not much time to shed tears for departing from our new love because we left our hotel 3 in the morning, awaiting our flight back to Cairns, Australia, where we would get our last fill of adventure.

January 6, 2010 Cairns, Australia

One thing about Cairns before I get deep and lyrical… there are bats! And I don’t mean the cute ones (if there are such) but big juicy scary ones that hang from trees right above the sidewalk, ready to strike down on any defenseless foreigner ignorant enough to walk the streets at night.

Seriously. If you have been brave and patient enough to have read this whole blog post, take away this thing and this thing alone, NEVER walk the streets of Cairns at night because Dracula’s minions will inevitably squawk and attack with their vicious wings and moonless night black bodies.

I mean, we actually never got attacked by them, but one did chase Luiza and me down the street all the way back to our hotel as we ran in the middle of the street waving our hands about and screaming in a mix of English and Armenian, for fear that it might understand one language or the other and call for backup.

But other than the creepy inhabitants of the night, Cairns truly was amazing. We went to a night market which was again, nothing more than a small version of Taiwan, where I got to practice the little Chinese I know and where we sat on black leather recliners, taking swigs from a fruity wine, and getting our feet massaged by gawking Asian boys. That is called living the good life.

What else I did get to see of Cairns was another world completely, literally. We took the day snorkeling tour and saw a world that had a life of its own: spiraling colorful coral, eclectic sea anemones, jumping fish, and of course, the most exciting, a huge homey sea turtle that gently swam around and came up for air. Ahh! Such an amazing experience that made me realize how much this world sustains itself without our meddling, and there it was, right under my floating mass, easily disturbed by one wrong kick of my flipper. Incredible, the whole idea that this world is mostly water, mostly them, not me…not us.



Our bro SCUBA instructor graciously suggested a place for us ladies to go out at night and when later we got to the bar in the Great Barrier Reef capital of Australia, what we found was a country bar called the Woolshed where tables were set up for dancing atop. What a silly thing to find. But it worked for us and apparently it worked for our instructor and his compatriots as they began arriving FOB, literally, still smelling like fish and SCUBA gear. Characters they were and characters they will be, in flower swimming trunks and a black suit jacket. Classy. Needless to say, we enjoyed our night, dancing and laughing and even having a go at the tables, though my clumsiness allotted only a two minute dance before I got back on solid ground.

And that was our adventure in Cairns and almost the end of our adventure in the Great Down Under.

Sydney, Australia January 9, 2010

We went to a rave club, had a meh time. Little did we know our lives would never be the same as we walked out of the club with sore feet and bleeding nerves, as we hailed the first cab we saw, and sat in on the best cab ride ever….

“Do you know who sings this?”

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Big Gulps huh?....Welp, see you later.

Big Gulps Huh?
Sometimes life accumulates so quickly that I have not the realization that so much time has passed by.
This month will mark the four month anniversary of life in Taiwan and I can't imagine it otherwise. I don't know if "I'm happy" is the right emotion or sentiment to describe about living here. Of course I am happy and content being here, but it is so much more, oh so much more.

I have dared to live outside of my normal life and here are some of the adventures that have occurred recently so Come along.

There are so many ups in being so far away and in such a strange place, but don't mistake these adventure stories for a happily ever after story.
I have had my hard days and one such day was the passing of my beloved uncle. He was literally one of those people in life that can just laugh and pull out their clarinet and make the world a happy and innocent place once again.
After suffering much, he passed away and left such blessed memories of his beautiful life.

He was a special person, and noticed by all...by the people he tried to talk to in his verrrry broken English, the people he would sing to when he didn't know what else to say, even the nurses whom he swooned whilst being taken care of.
They would ask me on several occasions, "Is he your grandpa? Because he is one special person".
And yes, he was often confused for my grandpa, but no one ever doubted how special he was.
The only confusion I ever had was which to compare him more to: the Monopoly or the KFC man. He was just that kind of person.

Last year, before he got sick, he met some of my best friends from college and he showed off his amazing power to laugh and have a conversation without understanding a word my friends said.

And when all else failed, he went to his room and pulled out his clarinet that he hadn't tuned for ages, dusted off the mouthpiece, an prdoceeded to play for us such unfamiliar and stringy songs that we couldn't help but cheer him on and laugh and understand that this was no ordinary man.

Well one of my friends, Jess, after hearing about his passing away wrote me an email expressing her sorrow for such a loss. She also wrote this ode that seemed so befitting. It is real. It is beautiful. It is Lova.


Ode to Armenian Uncle

oh giggly, Armenian uncle
you will always be in my honorary, Armenian heart
i am delighted you are frolicking around on Mt. Ararat
on a mound of Akmak's and lavash,
spread with lebne aplenty
Armenian heaven rejoice.





Jess, it is lovely. Thanks.

After the pain of losing such a beloved uncle, something else quite crazy and out of control occurred.

After a long day of work and bowling until 2 am with my awesome Smokin Shoes team, I came home exhausted and ready to sleep so I could go to work at 8:30 for my kindergarten class. That was not how the night proceeded.

At 4 am, I shot out of my bed (much like I did that night in San Diego when the drunk girl crashed her car in front of my house), as I heard the doorbell ringing and ringing.
One emotion I felt, FEAR. Understandably right?
With my hair swooped over my face and my makeshift pajamas, i tiptoed to the door and ever so frightfully opened the door.
Is my building on fire? Should I grab my valuables? Do I have time to pee?
I didn't have time.
I had no time to react for when I opened the door, there was no little Taiwanese man standing there yelling and motioning me to run for my dear life, instead it was my mother, my very own blood mother who stood in front of me jumping up and down...if you know my mom, that is not an exaggeration. She was literally jumping and dancing and not allowing my mind to process the scene before me.
Hmmmm. Hmmmmm. I don't understand.
"Mooooom?" I said as if I needed to prove it to myself...."mooooom?.....what.....are you doing here???"
Was all I could produce.
Well she came and she cleaned and she cooked, and she mothered me for a few days and then left me alone to wonder if she was ever really here. But the chocolate in the fridge is proof enough that she was.
It was lovely having my mama here. No matter how old we are or how independent, we are reduced to babies when our mothers are around. Once again, if I had to sneeze, she asked if I was sick. If I was too tired, she would bring food to me and tell me how amazing I am and say things that only moms can get away with for saying. It was grand. We had much fun and random adventures together.

We went to a cultural boat burning festival. We stood till 5 am in the ocean next to this grand wooden million dollar boat, waiting for it to set sail and burn in the horizon against the rising sun,
.... but instead after all the waiting, we got smoked out and became part of the sacrifice as the boat was burned on the sand.... right in front of us....and 20,000 people...without ANY safety regulations. Sometimes the things that don't make sense here, just don't make ANY sense.



After surviving that together, we hiked, drove along the mountains, got massages, and spent some time with my students dancing and being the people we are best.

She said the best part of Taiwan was my group of friends. So cheers to them!


Plus i got this amazing "jumping" pic of my mom which I cry from laughing every time I look at her face!! It is out of control!
It looks like one of my students. She is Taiwanese. Her name is Mendy. She is two.

Moving on.
Went on a girl's camping trip to this beautiful island where we camped, hiked, swam, snorkeled and of course got attacked by a swarm of jellyfish in mating season. At least that is what it seemed like. Out of breath and having survived a jellyfish guerrilla attack, we met this man who let us roam around with starfish and sea slugs and all kinds of strange and colorful sea creatures, reminding us that Taiwan is some kind of special. It really is.

Camping in this amazing island has just been one of the many mini adventures that reminds me what my life if about. Sitting over the cliffs overlooking the most amazing sunset and eating squid on a stick that we had just barbecued, I smiled. Yes, that is it, I smiled. It was for real though, one of those deep smiles that is utterly necessary to feel alive.

In between weekends, I spend days playing Settlers of Catan with Sandra and my coworker Miranda and her boyrfriend, going to night markets, going to dinner with the crew, watching The Office, bowling, reading The Idiot by Master D himself, and going to yoga on monkey mountain every wednesday where i get to hike and swim after with the monkeys. Just kidding, the monkeys no swim. They afraid of water. But they do hike with me.

And then Halloween happened.
That is a different kind of story.
Halloween just came and went by. What more is there to say? Had a party at school that we had been preparing for months, where all my munchkins showed up as vampires....of all things.
Here are some of them in class while I am attempting to teach...attempting mind you.

Then afterward, we all got ready at the Babbaganoush. Sandra dressed everyone up and we ended up with a Newsie, a Soviet Union Spy (Svetlana Fyodorovna Barashnikov), Frida Kahlo, A dirty Mexican, and a gypsy.

Normally the gypsy is my easy outfit, but I decided to be a little more sly this time so I bought a gun, put the soviet flag on my fur hat and called myself a russian spy. Done and Done.


We went to a party at a place called "The Roof" which was not to be confused with actually being on the roof. I give it a little credit...it did have a balcony.

People had some incredible outfits ranging from little boy superheroes,

to bunnies in body tight outfits....boys in body tight bunny outfits,

a golden Buddha, which won the grand prize of $10,000 NT

H1N1, and the other seriously odd costumes and get ups.
this is our friend Trevor from Canada. He wears afros.

All to say, after dancing alllll night, we got home at 6 in the morning, rested our weary heads, and called the night a success!!

That brings us up to the present. The present of me sitting here, the weather getting cooler, nay, colder. The present where my classes are starting to feel normal and I know the kids' names and kill at least two cockroaches everyday. The present you know, when life seems to be settling in.

I miss my family dearly. I miss friends nearly and clearly and ever so merely.
To those who read this blog, thanks for connecting with me and for letting me know.
Emily M and Emily S, Ashley, Evelina (my sista from another mista) and all those who read it that I don't know of.
Knowing others read this somehow makes me feel not so far away, not so distant.

Sending enough love to barely cross the Pacific and make it around the world to you guys. Life is good. Love is good. Loving Life is really good.

Welp, see you later.

Sunday, September 20, 2009

This story beats any other I have ever told....


From a journal entry, and I quote myself:
"Today I decided to hike up Monkey Mountain. Now back home, climbing was always fun and an adventure but somehow those "adventures" seem so insignificant to the obscure situations I get myself into while hiking here in Taiwan.
So there I go hiking up and the beautiful and mystical thing about this mountain is that you can never take the same route up...even if you try. I decided to be really brave and adventurous this one time and reach the top of this endless mountain, which is not even visible from below. I asked a few fellow climbers to direct me to the top and there I began my trek.

Up and up, higher and higher I climbed and it began to get so rocky and rugged, I had to hold on and hoist myself up like a monkey over boulders and trees. I met up with two older people climbing upwards and being somewhat prideful, I regained my energy and quickly surpassed them. Nice Anna, way show them you got game. Proud of my superior hiking ability while passing 60 year old climbers, I reached the top of the broad pathway to where the path became really narrow, overlooked a cliff, and became a dense jungle. Only because the adrenaline was still pumping in my proud veins did I continue up this eerie path. I didn't get very far though.

It was not in my imagination that with each step I took, I heard more and more clicking and hissing and realized almost a little too late that I was surrounded by the native of this mountain...the monkeys. I am not one to easily panic so when the papa bear monkey started towards me slowly I just stepped away (almost falling off the mountain) and stared at him toughly as he walked towards me and then passed me, glaring at me the whole time.


I took another deep breath, feeling a little awesome and so scared at the same time, and decided to take another path to the left that might be clear of these native red-faces. I started my way up along the left path this time when I heard deeper and louder clicking and hissing. It was then that I came across the terminator of monkeys, the Hulk, the superior pure bred gorilla monkey and he looked absolutely pissed.
As I have previously portrayed myself, I like to think that I am a brave person, an adventurer of some sort...that is until I come to this point in the story. For at that terrifying moment, looking into the fierce eyes of death, I screamed and ran down that mountain as fast as my size six feet in my rip off name brand tennis shoes could take me....and gorilla monkey followed closely behind.
I can't imagine what level of crazy I must have looked like when I met up with the old man climbing towards the great path of doom. Still almost running and looking rugged, I almost fell on him as I looked bewildered and yelled, "NOOOO, big monkey, BIG. Scary!" Mind you this was done with words AND actions. My monkey impression WAS pretty convincing though, I must say.
He looked at me, then up, then at me, and calmly with nice simple English said, "OK."
"OK?" I replied.
...
"OK, follow me."
"Are you crazy old man? This monkey will eat you like a slow roasted turkey on Thanksgiving. And you want me to FOLLOW you up there? If you think I look crazy, you must be insane!!!" I thought to myself.
But out loud all I could muster was, "OK."
Ok, so I allowed this seventy year old man to lead me once more up gorilla mountain.



We got to the aforementioned spot where I had met the face of true hostility.
Now the Taiwanese might be afraid of the sun, and water, and H1N1, but they are lion tamers when it comes to business dealing with monkeys, dare I say monkey business.
This sunken little man went right up to the Hulk monkey and just stared him down, alpha male style! It was pure magic and this little wussy monkey scampered away in shame with his tail between his legs. I was so impressed! I knew I had chosen the rightful guide...or had he chosen me?
At his point we met up with the old couple who I had previously Rambo-ed past in my youthful pride. Oh ironic life, the turtle does always beat the hare.
So there we were, the four of us walking up and three of them chatting, probably about my naivete. The couple pointed to a clearing where a group of their friends were sitting and playing boardgames... in the middle of this dangerous mountain...like this was a freaking Starbucks!
The couple motioned me to go and sit with them, but I looked at my ruthless guide and said, "top?".
"Yes.Top." He replied.
"Me.Top." I confidently followed his statement.
This seemed like a ridiculous idea to the couple and the old man, as they shook their heads and could not understand why a young girl would want to do such a thing. They clicked their tongues and shrugged their shoulders, walking away to meet their friends. I looked at my old friend and motioned him to climb onward.
"ok," was all he said.

This fit old man put me to shame as I began huffing and puffing trying to keep up with his bony frame that calmly sauntered up the mountain like a fresh deer.
"Do you climb everyday?" I asked.
"Two hours," he replied not having a clue what I was asking.
"Uuuuhh, do you climb today, and tomorrow and next day?" I tried again.
"Oh yes. Yes. Break on Sunday."
Wowoweeewow. I was very impressed. This man climbs this treacherous mountain everyday and of course takes his rest just like God did, on the seventh day!

Higher and higher we climbed, and shimmied between rocks, and yanked ourselves up the climbing ropes until we finally reached the top.


"It's so beautiful." I commented, "So no monkeys here?"
"No, no monkeys."




Relaxing, a bit,I took a few photos of the view and was just in time to hear him calmly say, "No, no monkeys...just snakes."
"How bout we keep moving old man?" I suggested.
Monkeys might looks scary, but snakes? They can kill...and for fun!!
So we went onward up and around the mountain, no turning back now.

Going back down the other side of the mountain climbing over rocks and trees and looking like we would be lost forever, we came upon a wooden path and there at the top of Monkey Mountain we found ourselves a nice outdoor workout area.
My friend and I hung up our bags and exercised.
He went straight for the barbells and I went for the hula hoop in this literal sense of the word, "jungle gym".


Standing next to another old man who was hula hooping, I thought that life couldn't get more adventurous than that image right there. 23 year old Armenian girl,at a gym on top of Monkey Mountain with two strange old Taiwanese men, hula hooping. What have I done right in life?

Not one to stay at a gym for two long, I interrupted my friend's sit ups, said my farewell and continued on the wooden path down Monkey Mountain, exhausted from my day's adventure.

Little did I know that I wasn't home safe yet...

Taking fun pictures and patting myself on the back for surviving this adventure,
I froze mid pat when I realized that the path ahead of me was strewn with an array of monkeys. This was the cosmopolitan of monkeys, the New York, New York. Without my fearless leader, all I had was my wee little self and my fear. But then I thought if this frail old man who is afraid of the sun can conquer the monkey mind, why couldn't I?
So holding my bag tight, and my head high, I walked onward and was doing just fine until my heart stopped.
It stopped when I came upon an intimate mating session right in the middle of my path! How insensitive and positively scandalous to mate in such a manner right in front of me. Wanting to run out of that red light district but not wanting to threaten the male, I looked straight ahead, found the very edge of the path, and walked onward quivering. I must have looked like a deer trapped in a lion's den pretending that if it didn't make eye contact, then the lions wouldn't realize it was their dinner for the night. But I guess somehow it worked because I stepped over, around, and once accidentally on the monkeys and I made it out alive!
Applauding my bravery for overcoming such obstacles I stopped walking for one moment and in that moment, the rush of adrenaline gave way to my body's true terror and my legs began to shake like Beyonce in her "Single Ladies" music video. I realized that I needed to do something drastic or else my legs would give out.
So I ran.
As fast as I could down this mountain until I found this little hut that I am sitting in now getting eaten alive by mosquitoes.
Ironic, in the face of viscous territorial monkeys and deadly snakes, I get eaten alive by pesky little mosquitoes. I am counting 12 from the time I sat down and started writing this entry, including one on my thumb knuckle.

Well the birds are squawking above me I hear loud thunder which usually precedes a rainstorm, so I should probably pack up and find my way down. If I come out of this alive, in the most humble way, let me say that I rocked this adventure!"
September 18, 2009