Bangkok

I had lived in South East Asia for half of my life and this is my first time in Thailand! So overdue, but I was super excited and had high expectations. Those were completely smashed! I had such an awesome and refreshing time that I couldn’t bear to come back home, but I know for sure it won’t be my last time in Thailand.

I started off in Bangkok. It felt so much like home. Home home. Organized chaotic traffic, warm and humid, smelly roads and cheap food. I love every part of it, even the unpleasant parts. Everything is so colourful and busy, as if Covid never happened.

As much as I hate to admit it, Icon Siam is such an amazing mall and the owners did a great job bringing the vibe of outdoor markets to the indoors. I thought we would just have a quick look at the mall but I ended up enjoying it a lot more than I expected.

The old and new buildings stand together as a lesson of history for Bangkok’s visitors. The Thai culture is rich and I can see the country emerging as a prosperous hub connecting South and South East Asia. Maybe the future is here?!

I also had time to explore the old streets of Chinatown. I thought I was walking into small, dirty alleys, but the stores with almost anything I could imagine buying open up and I felt like I was in a world of shopping.

Bold and transformative, I was so mesmerized by the city’s diversity and its eagerness to adopt new ways of doing things. I saw street food vendors use cashless payments, 24hr laundromats that don’t need staff, seamless subway (though the connection to BTS could be better…) payment. Even with the rush hour deadlock traffic, the city feels really connected and bustling. Can’t wait to come back!

Montreal

Before this year I hadn’t been to Montreal once, and in April I went twice for two different dance competitions. I can’t believe I never visited before! It’s such a pretty city even early in April when the snow had just melted and the months of accumulated dirt and debris start to show.

On my first trip I stayed mostly downtown and got to see some of the European architecture. My friends took me to a coffee shop that is inside an old bank. So cool inside! It reminded me of the Tzar’s palaces in St. Petersburg. Not nearly as glamorous though.

That time, I stayed in Shaughnessy Village in a very old building. I forget how spacious those older apartments are! I am too used to being in modern tiny apartments. I made a bit of conversation with my AirBnb host. One is a photographer on the side and came all the way from Slovakia. The other host came from BC but wanted something different. He travelled through India, Vietnam, Cambodia and Australia. It’s so inspiring to meet people who have moved around and travelled.

The second trip I had more time in Mile End and Little Italy. I was high on sugar from all the Jewish bakes, donuts, but I had to go to the famous coffee shop Cafe Olympico. It was a sunny Friday afternoon and it was nice to sit down with a book I got from bookshop nearby.

Later that day I walked towards the Biodome, where my dance competition was held. It wasn’t too hard to get lost because you can see the building from far away and I just kept walking closer to it.

I stayed in Hochelaga and got to see a few quiet local streets and alleys.

The building styles are so different from Vancouver, and there’s different styles on one block too. It’s nice to just walk around and look like a tourist even in a quiet neighbourhood.

I also got to talk a bit with some of the people in the same AirBnb as me. One person was so impressed with my dance competition hair and makeup so he made friends with me. As an exchange student from HongKong, he was also taking every chance possible to travel.

Travel bug is back in me!

Helsinki

I only had two days in Helsinki, but they were very relaxing and calming. I spent a whole day at Stockman to satisfy the shopaholic in me, and another day biking around the city and surrounding areas like Lehtisari and Lauttasaari. Where are the people? Rush hour in Helsinki is so gentle.

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The city in late November sparkles in Christmas lights. The main Academic Bookstore in the city center lights up with decorations. I wanted to buy so many books there, even the Finnish ones, and for a moment I wish I was Finnish.

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It’s a city I want to get lost in. Hop on a bike and put on some good jogging shoes and turn off the GPS and be completely lost. I don’t know what’s beyond the water and parks, and I don’t know what this street is called, but I don’t mind not knowing. I somehow ended up in a residential area with big houses – perhaps they’re summer houses – and it was quiet I could hear the highway traffic from kilometers away. The sound of wind and the water harmonizing made me feel tranquil. Happy.

The city is so safe at any time. The bike store owner who rented me a bike was fine with me leaving the bike unlocked outside. “It’s Finland, you know!”, he said. In the stillness of the city, I was dazed and dreamy. By the water bank, I fantasized about drifting off into the water on a small boat and read a book. It was dark and gloomy – but it’s the unique feeling of just drifting out into the unknown, knowing you will always find your own home.

Then when I hit a dead end, I thought, does that mean my little adventure is over? But a city always extends beyond its cul-de-sacs and closed roads and what tourists experience in a short time. Helsinki can feel like home to those who are willing to stay long enough and discover the city’s nooks and crannies.

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The end of a journey is not the end of an adventure.

 

Barcelona

Barcelona is easy to fall in love with. Her elegant facades, warm sunshine sprinkling on the alleys of Barri Gòtic, xurros for breakfast, lunch and dinner (!), blocks and blocks that feel like miles and miles of the shiniest names Gucci, Prada, Hermes, then the beaches, shorelines that light up at night, transforming the city into a different place than what you would have seen in daytime. She’s so edgy and blunt, but also pretty and shy.

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It’s easy to fall in love with Avinguda Diagonal, the broadest avenue in Barcelona where cars coast down non-stop, blasting music and rushing to find parking, but still leaving space for bikes and pedestrians to enjoy the space as well. Bikes aren’t afraid of cars! They co-exist in such spacious networks of avenues and carrer’s (streets), decorated by homes and apartments that unapologetically carry the breathe of Gaudi. Or maybe being a tourist has imprinted Gaudi into everything I see and hear in Barcelona!

Even when it pours down on Barcelona, there’s paella stores, mango mojitos, even McDonald’s that never sleep of course, supermercats that offer an astounding range of hard liquors for the night crawlers, a tucked away bar owned by Norwegians serving tortillas (the egg kind). Perfume is in the air, everyone seems to be walking in leather shoes and wear Massimo Dutti. Of course that’s the shopaholic in me speaking, but being in Barcelona makes me want to look and feel cool, stylish, trendy. Because the city is. And if you had walked down the street and saw a girl or boy like that, how can you not take a second glance.

And then there’s the Catalonia independence day – which I mistook for a football game, super offensive to the Barcelonians – when the streets that are normally so busy, become three times as hectic and loud. Try making it through Les Ramblas without stopping and pondering if you should spend a few euros on a scarf that says BARCELONA, or get inside La Sagrada Familia without waiting a few hours and then realizing that inside the church doesn’t feel like a church with the, seemingly, tens of thousands of selfie sticks pointing against the beautiful colours of heaven. The city seems to never sleep, or rest, or go home.

It feels like half of Barcelona is tourists. Who is a true Barcelonian? I could only guess that they would be one of those people waving the Catalonian flag, but then they are separatists, and only represent one part of Barcelonia. I don’t think there was a part of the city that isn’t crowded with guests from everywhere – and I love hearing undiscernible sounds of languages – but something tells me I didn’t actually experience Barcelona.

So they city I fell in love with at first sight is probably not the city I saw. But if I did find Barcelona in its true form – whatever that may be – I could love her as well?

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So I tried to look for the ‘real’ parts of Barcelona – in a bookstore, Laie, at el placa de la cultura. Three hours in there and I hunted for books, publications, texts, colouring games, maps, atlases… whatever that can explain the city to me. How is it so urbanized? When did the city start planning for bike lanes? Which part of the city survived the wars? What is authentic Gaudi? I eventually found a book, ‘A new urbanization  metabolism’, that I hope will let me see Barcelona away from Barcelona, away from the boutiques and lines of tourists, so I can understand the city for what it is.

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In the end I don’t think you could experience Barcelona without knowing its affairs, past and current, and fully comprehend the eagerness of the people. What are they thinking when they march down the streets with the flag of Catalonia? Hopefully the next time here I won’t be hypnotized by the colours and excitement – but learn about the city, for real.

35 more days of summer

“Girl it’s nice to see the way you be working hard
Don’t nobody really notice you be on your job (job)
Overtime, overtime, overtime, yeah”
Overtyme – Mishon

That song pretty much sums up my 53 hour work week, which still hasn’t ended.

I have 35 days left in Vancouver before I go away for 4 months, and I am spinning like a wheel. Between my two jobs and seeing friends and SailBot, I am barely at home. I don’t have the time to read, and when I do I am too tired to start a new book.

I just realized recently that I will be gone for my favorite season in Vancouver. I won’t be around to see the heat slowly fade and the drops of sun turn into drops of rain. I will miss the local streets blanketed in that warm colour of cartenoid revealing itself. Lund will probably have the same colours! But autumn in Vancouver will always have a special place in my heart.

I remember last year in October, I took my sister out for a bike ride. We biked along Midtown/Ridgeway to Fraser St and came back, and that’s when I looked up in the rare clear sky and thought my life was perfect. I think I will start making a list of moments when I am unhesitating happy. Then probably I will see the best pictures flow through that string of memory.

These last two months feel rushed and squished, like when I’m making a poster and forgot to put in the last paragraph so I try to edit it, shrinking the font, taking away the margins, picking a different font maybe… I try to take in as much work as possible at my job, and then see as many friends as I could, scheduling to see them after dinner or between events. I have different messengers to talk to different people, making promises that I don’t know if I can keep. I’m making plans to travel for September, anxious about the little time I have to study and see places. There’s a long list of cities I want to go to. There’s also a long list of things I won’t get done this summer. Dance, karate, swim, road trip.

I hope I don’t sell out. I hope I won’t trade meaningful experiences for a pretty profile picture in Spain showing off my bikini. I hope I don’t give up studying so I can drink some weird beer in a place whose name I can’t pronounce. I hope I get to see places as souls and not as space.

I also hope the rest of my year will be on overtime. Never standing still even when I am still.

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