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Friday, November 29, 2013

Setting Sail From Los Alamitos

It's cold here. Snow has fallen and stuck, Christmas markets start this weekend, and I'm being selective about when I actually want to leave the house to venture into the frozen air. It is setting in (not all the way yet) that my next 3 or so months will be the same as far as weather goes. Cold, gray, icy, gray, did I mention cold?

Accepting the onset of Winter has been annoying this week, so I decided it was time to share some sailing photos from a trip at home this summer. It makes me happy to remember the sail and how we were blessed with great winds, relatively warm air and clear visibility. I messed around with my camera for some of the time, but we also had a usual dolphin pod sighting. Jenn was pretty excited about the dolphins since she hadn't seen so many up close like that before. Ugh just writing about this makes me long for summer again. Only..... 6 more months. Boo.

Today is Thanksgiving in the U.S.! Happy Thanksgiving family! I wish I were home to spend crazy dysfunctional times with the whole clan, but I'm there in spirit - and I'm super busy preparing for Tacosgiving this evening. Some expatriate friends and I are making Carnitas tacos, corn, black beans, chips and salsa, and of course margaritas. I spent the better part of my day making roasted tomato and chili salsa alongside a roasted bell pepper and corn guacamole. YUM. It was weird searching for all of the ingredients here, since most of it was a little harder to find quality versions of. The limes and avocados here make me sad. Anyways, it turned out delicious and I can't wait to put it all together tonight! I'm making the margaritas as well, I bought some agave and I'm trying out fresh lime, agave syrup and Silver tequila margaritas on the rocks. I'll report back. Stay tuned for some photos of Tacosgiving and maybe I should include the recipes for what we made? It might make sense. Until then enjoy these photos of happiness on the Pacific. Bis bald!
















Monday, November 4, 2013

Yes to Love, Yes to Life, Yes to Staying in More

I've just spent the most wonderful night doing..... absolutely nothing important. Two glasses of wine, three NPR articles, three burning candles, one chamomile tea and one "Here's The Thing" podcast interview with Alec Baldwin and Lena Dunham and I have become a supremely content girl. There's also a marvelous satisfaction in having a night in and alone, and knowing that you can go to bed early. I understand this post makes me sound like a reclusive grandmother that is possible beginning to suffer from dementia - but that is just because I'm not burrito-ed in my comfy bed writing when I'm out living, breathing and drinking in the world.

This weekend was a strange and increasingly familiar mixture of old friends and new friends, awkward house parties and riotous college parties, reliable Irish pubs, bottles and bottles of 3€ wine, laughs until our abs hurt, chocolate, more chocolate, more laughter that caused tears, there were dates and hangovers and opposite-sex sleepovers for some, dozens of cups of coffee, and a few items lost. On the whole, it was a blast. But it also blasted the stamina out of my Monday. 

I spent my Monday standing in a worthless line at the visa office, followed by aimless wandering and impulse purchases (damn you H&M). I technically had the night off to go out, but after such a full weekend I really did not envision myself going out or going crazy. Tonight was everything I hoped for, a perfect emotional break and tranquil time to do some intellectual reading or personal brain probing, and have little catch-up conversations on Facebook. I love hearing blurbs about friends' lives from home. Things I used to hear on their couch, or in their car, or at a bi-weekly coffee date.

Hearing about time marching on in everyone's world should feel natural - it's life - but it makes my entire life here feel surreal, make pretend. Slap me for this cliché, but my life here does not feel real. I wake up every single morning and by noon I've already thought to myself at least once, "How fucking beautiful is it that this is my life?" Well self, it is pretty damn beautiful. I am the happiest I have been in ages. And not an impermanent or momentary happiness, but a serious joy. One that just overflows into my day. Sure, I have moments of homesickness. I would sell an organ to snuggle my dog, I wish I were at friend's triathlon and half-marathon finishes, my little sister's first high school dance, my Dad's birthday, and don't even get me started on what it will be like away from home on the holidays. 

And yes, I encounter immense frustrations as well. Being an au pair is really, truly frustrating at times guys. Living in a house that's not yours, raising someone else's kids, not to mention those kids don't really owe you a whole lot, like respect or anything like that. It can be frustrating and testing. I'm grateful for the life and social skills I had before this - but I learn new ones every day working with kids. I am better at choosing my battles. I do my best and let that be enough. When things don't go how I planned for them to go (like 98% of the time when you're with small children) I just go wherever that moment and new wave is taking me. 

But thoughts of homesickness and frustration don't dominate my mind or my days. They do not nearly define them. Moving here was selfish, but it was the best thing I've done for myself - and right now I'm okay with that. Munich I love you! Life I love you! 



Saturday, November 2, 2013

Barcelona Part 2: Sagrada Familia


The day before we left Barcelona, we were all a little sore from the night before. Fortunately, I had stayed in at the hostel and gone to bed fairly early (grandma status). It ended up being a great choice because I had the stamina to rally troops for a truly spectacular sight: Sagrada Familia. 

As the pictures show, Sagrada Familia is under construction. The architect, Antoni Gaudi, died with much of the Basilica left unfinished. The effort toward completion has been slow, particularly since it is funded by donation. It is set to be completed in 2026, the 100 year anniversary of Gaudi's death. 

Despite being incomplete, the interior was awe-inspiring. It seriously blows my mind that someone could envision such a complicated and genius design for a structure. The stained glass portions were my favorite, I'm a sucker for stained glass. The winding staircase that was hundreds of meters high was also terrifying impressive. If you make it to Barcelona, this is an absolute must see. We didn't pay for the audioguide and I definitely regret it, so pay the extra couple of euros for that info!