UBC Commuter Tips (+ Final Commuter Tunes!)

After twelve weeks of making the trip from suburbia to downtown Toronto and back, I finally appreciate how difficult it is to be a commuter student at UBC.

For my first couple of weeks, I was so exhausted from the commute that by the time I got home I just curled up in my bed and dozed off halfway through an episode of Parks & Recreation. While I’m now able to go to work and back without transforming into a complete sloth, the commute is still long, draining, and more than a little boring at times. Luckily, I’ve found some ways to make it more bearable.

Here are some commuting tips that I’ve figured out over the summer, with a few UBC specific tips thrown in:

1. Get everything ready the night before. Commuter students don’t get to roll out of bed and walk across the street to class. When you’re living off campus, you sometimes need to wake up brutally early in order to make it to class on time—especially if it’s one of the dreaded 8 am sections. This can be super challenging if you’re not a morning person (like me). So how did I manage to catch my 7 am train every morning? Simple: I would prepare everything the night before. I would set out my clothes, make my lunch, pack my bag, and put my Starbucks French roast in the coffee maker so that when my alarm went off in the morning, I wouldn’t need to put any thought into getting ready.

2. Charge your electronics. Along the same lines, make sure that you charge your phone/iPod/Kindle/iPad/whatever other pieces of technology you might have the night before your commute. There’s nothing worse than wanting to cozy up to Fifty Shades of Grey only to realize that your eReader’s battery is as dead as Julius Caesar (not that I read Fifty Shades or anything…).

3. Bring snacks. Warning: food on campus can be kind of expensive. Even if you only shell out a few dollars here and there, it can add up. My favourite commuter snacks were granola bars, grapes, homemade trail mix, and red pepper and hummus. Plus, you’re forced to eat healthy foods for lunch this way! (Although I recommend you indulge in a Blue Chip cookie every once in a while)

4. Get yo’ text on. You can find out when the next few busses are coming by texting the stop number to 33333. I wish the TTC offered this service. It would’ve saved me many minutes of wondering whether I have time for a Starbucks run before the next bus arrives.

5. Remember your U-Pass. I was notorious among my group of friends for misplacing my U-Pass on a regular basis. Keep it in a designated pocket in your wallet/backpack/satchel/whatever and leave it there. And don’t forget your student card, too!

6. Buy good headphones. The purpose of noise-cancelling headphones on your commute is twofold: a) to block out everyone around you and b) to keep your music in your ears and no one else’s. While I realize that not everyone can afford Beats by Dre, you can get a good quality pair for $20-$30, and they’re definitely worth it. I personally use SkullCandy Inkd ear buds, and love them! They come in lots of pretty colours and get the job done. And please don’t use the white Apple headphones. That is, unless you want everyone on the 99 B-Line knowing that you’re jamming out to One Direction (I’m revealing way too many of my guilty pleasures in this post).

7. Be courteous on the bus. Give up your seat for that Betty White look-a-like. Don’t reserve a spot for your gym bag. Text your friends (or mom!) instead of calling them. It’s just good manners, and you’ll earn karma points. Win-win.

8. Switch up your commute. Take a different route or method of transportation every once in a while. This can make the commute seem a little less monotonous and give you a nice change of scenery. And if you live close enough, why not try biking to school? You can fit in a little morning exercise as well.

9. Stay the night! There’s a commuter hostel in Gage where commuter students can stay for $30 a night. This means that if you’re studying late during exam time, you don’t necessarily have to bus all the way back to Surrey.

10. Get involved on campus! Don’t use the fact that you’re not on campus 24/7 as an excuse. I can 100% guarantee that you’ll have a better university experience if you get involved. Whether this is through a REC intramural league, peer tutoring, or a fraternity/sorority is completely up to you, but make sure you do something! If you only come to UBC campus for your classes and then hop back on the bus, you’re definitely missing out.

To celebrate the fact that I’m one step closer to Vancouver (and no more commutes!), here’s a song that reminds me of my favourite city in the world: The Only Place by Best Coast . Just replace “LA” with “Vancouver” and the Kings jersey with a Canucks jersey (and in case you were wondering, yes, the band’s name was the inspiration for my blog title). Enjoy!

5…4…3…2…1…

It’s official: my multiple end-of-summer countdowns have begun. 8 days until I’m finished work. 15 days until Osheaga. 27 days until I go back to Vancouver (aka the ‘couv? A friend from work and I are trying to turn this into a thing. Make it happen). And just a little over a month until I move into TPark and head off to Kelowna for advisor training. Whoa.

All the amazing things happening in the last month of my summer make me want to have a dance party. Here’s a summery, smiley, sunshiney song to take care of that very desire. Enjoy the second half of your summer, folks. September will be here (in all its glory!) before you know it.

PS – Another thing that makes me want to dance is my class schedule for next year. Not only do I love all my classes, but I don’t have a single class before noon during first term. My memory foam mattress pad and I are about to spend some serious quality time together.

Update + ER Scribe FAQ

It has been so long since I blogged, I realize I tend to blog when I want a little rant and I haven’t had any rant moments this summer.  But I have got a lot of emails about the ER Scribe job I currently have so I’ll answer all of those, but give a quick UBC update.  So I have pretty much finalized with myself, because I am such an indecisive person which is why I keep changing my mind about majors!  I just want something doable, yet something that interests me.  If you’ve read my blog for a while now, you know I was biology, then I transitioned into CMS and then I debated CMS and Integrated Sciences.  I really liked my transition between biology to CMS because of the flexibility.  Biology is a great program and suits some people, but it doesn’t suit me.  CMS and Integrated Sciences offers the flexibility I want, and is a smaller program which is always good.  So I pretty much decided this summer that Integrated Sciences was for me, and I started off wanting to Integrate Microbiology & Immunology and Physiology.  But it seemed too heavy for me, and didn’t really capture what I want to do in the future. 

I want to go to medical school,  and I’d also like to go to third-world countries at some point and do relief work and help with the health in different communities….all I know is at some point I want to go to probably Africa and help with the nutrition, vaccinations, and techniques to limit disease.  Based on all of this, I finally decided that an Integrated Sciences major tying Nutrional Sciences and Microbiology would be optimal for me.  I haven’t had my complete application approved yet, apparently its a long process…but a process I’m willing to deal with because I really want to do this major.  For the major you have to pretty much set up a plan, course by course, fitting in all of the Faculty of Science requirements as well as Integrated science requirements, and this part is what took me the longest.  Based on my plan it looks like I’ll be done at UBC December 2014 instead of June 2014, only because certain courses were only available first semester and I can’t do it second semester and be done June 2014.  It’s things like that, that made the planning such a hassle, I think if I’ll be stuck till December I might as well make it an honors degree and add a few credits I’ll have to talk to the advisor about that.  Anyways!  I will be posting my schedule for next year when I’ve finalized it, I should post it within a week.  It may change a little bit if the Insc people dont like some course selections but I’m pretty certain of what I’m taking.  Since MCAT studying didn’t go quite as I planned this summer (that story is for another day) I’m gonna get a little headstart with some courses, especially Phyl 301 which seems like a semi-nightmare. 

Now on to my job.  I started my position as an ER Medical Scribe this summer, and it’s been a really great experience.  I’ve seen so many different patients and cases from mild to quite serious.  I think the coolest thing I’ve seen so far is the doctor stick a tube into a patients chest to reinflate the lung (atleast thats what I think he was doing).  Nonetheless, very cool to see.  One thing I am certain of now is that I’m not grossed out by blood, weird bodily functions, pretty much anything cringe-worthy I’m not grossed out by.  I already kind of knew this, but now I’m certain.  Someone emailed me that my blog came up when they searched ER Scribe Vancouver, which is pretty cool, just goes to show how new this is in Canada.  Also impressed that they were looking it up, as I didn’t know about being an ER scribe until I saw the email from Pre Med Society.  I did a little FAQ below that covers most of the questions I’ve been getting.

FAQ
1.  How did you find out about the position?
Through pre-med society at UBC.  It’s quite funny to me how everyone and their moms wants to do med school at UBC yet such a small amount of people are part of pre med society.  Anyways, join! 

2.  Where can I get more information about the program?
Well I’m in the first ER scribe program in Canada, so I assume there isn’t much information out there.  Before I had my interview I looked up the job in the states, and it’s pretty much the same duties.  So google!  If better resources for information become available, I’ll definitely put it on here. 

3.  How are the hours?
Well all the scribes have a doctor they primarily work with and you show up when the doctor comes, so that could be a normal morning/day shift, or it could be an evening/night shift.  The night shifts take getting used to, but their actually my favorite because I’m naturally a night person. 

4.  Can I get into the program?
As far as I know there are more doctors wanting scribes, so there likely will be opportunities, look out for it, sorry I can’t give a more specific answer.

5.  What exactly do you do?
I follow my doctor with patient’s chart and write down the past medical history, subjective, and objective (physical exam), as well as a few miscallaneous tasks.

6.  How long is training?
I’m sure this differs, I think I was done training after 6-8 shifts with each shift being 8 hours, somewhere around there.

As for all the people who wanted me to email them with more details, I will be getting to that very soon.  Also, apparently blog squad is going to be featuring only first year bloggers, I’m not sure, but bookmark my blog should that happen :P   Hope everyone is enjoying their summer! :D

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week 3: thoughts and recollections from Guatemala

I believe I am currently in the state one would call “completely and utterly burnt out.”  As such, today’s will have to be a shorter, snappier, and less edited travel blog with a smattering of photos.

Evening set upon the village as we filed into a one-roomed building and took seats on plastic chairs.  The Hilary Clinton of Nebaj sat before us: a confident woman in traditional clothing, her gleaming beaded necklace catching what dim light there was in the room.  We knew her to be the “mayor” of the local indigenous group—an ambiguous position caught in between the “occidental” (Western) government, as she called the Guatemalan government, and the locals.  I was fascinated to hear if and how First Nations’ self-government functioned in Guatemala in comparison to Canada—especially from a woman who could, perhaps, vocalize issues differently than a man would.

There were a number of impressionable moments.

Dona Anna, hands folded in front of her and head held aloft, seemed nonchalantly interested to hear where we were from and what we thought of First Nations.  Well, Aly mentioned that the Enbridge pipeline plans to plough through several resisting Aboriginal roups, and we were learning, increasingly, that Canadian mining corporations affected the First Nations all the way down in Guatemala.  My professors bickered over beer later on about what kind of interaction this was–was it cosmopolitan, this brief exchange of thoughts between Canadian students and a Guatemalan indigenous leader?   The program is named “Arts Term Abroad in Global Citizenship” after all, and we spent a lot of time thinking about cosmopolitanism during the trip; especially asking if  we are cosmopolitans of the fashionable, elite “frequent flyer” variety, and if cosmopolitanism is inherently one-sided.

This poli sci junkie found the electoral process for local leaders quite interesting.  The mayor said that you would not take it upon yourself to run for leadership positions and to run campaigns, but you would be chosen by community vote.  You would have to accept the duty if the community chose you.  Hmmm…

Furthermore (a perfectly decent word to use in essays, Professor K.), their judicial punishments were different.  Serious offenses would incur traditional, so-called “symbolic”,  beatings.  While a freely wandering mind may compare and contrast this with Foucault’s depiction of non-violent prisions being, in some way, incredibly violent upon the mind….it was nonetheless an image that raised all sorts of speculation in me from  ”uh, really? to “how do pluralistic judicial systems work, jurisdictionally?–do indigenous people really have a choice in which courts they were to choose?”…and finally, “who am I, to judge these judges?”

I will evaluate the two courses, PHIL 335 (Power and Oppression) and SOCI 430 (Civil Society in Theory and Practice), as I would any other course at the end of this blog series.  In the meantime, I will say that we had our first couple of assignments those two weeks in Nebaj.  One assignment was a short paper that caused a contagious fever of nerves that spread among the students living in close quarters.  All of that perfectionism for something we would have typed up in a couple of hours or less in Vancouver, alone in our rooms.  As for myself, I decided early on that I would focus mostly on comprehension, not assignments or grades.  Besides, I could not physically do more than that–I could not think creatively and thoroughly without private space and extended periods of time for reflection.  The physical demands of being around people at all times, listening to others, or being ready to hop into a conversation, sucked up energy out of this introvert.  It reminded me a little bit of this poem by Franz Kafka, although obviously with a much more diluted meaning:

The Street Window
by Franz Kafka
Translated by Willa and Edwin Muir

Whoever leads a solitary life and yet now and then wants to attach himself somewhere, whoever, according to changes in the time of day, the weather, the state of his business, and the like, suddenly wishes to see any arm at all to which he might cling – he will not be able to manage for long without a window looking on to the street. And if he is in the mood of not desiring anything and only goes to his window sill a tired man, with eyes turning from his public to heaven and back again, not wanting to look out and having thrown his head up a little, even then the horses below will draw him down into their train of wagons and tumult, and so at last into the human harmony.

One school night, we returned to our classroom in the cafe after dark to listen to a man standing at the front of the room as if giving a lecture.  I found this choice of location odd, as those who regularly lecture me at university do not teach us about their personal stories.  He called himself a “survivor” of the civil war (he was optimistic) and he shared with us memories that should have never been.  I do not think I will ever forget the experience of listening to Guatemalans speak after dark.   I mean, not just what they said, but how they said it.  So many of these personal stories were spoken in Spanish, rehashed and rephrased in English by a translator, tossed into the humid night air, past my drooping eyelids, into my consciousness.  Anyway, he tied everything back to the Mayan Calendar.  As many will have heard via pop culture, 2012 is an important year for the Mayans; it is the end of an era in time.  He expressed the sincere hope for a brighter, harmonious, flourishing future for Guatemalans and the world.  Amen to that.

Next time: less crappy writing, living on the Coffee Co-op, and more.

Dragon of False Consciousness tattoo, anyone?

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Officially stoked to live in Totem

So…which house is Vanier?

On Tuesday, I finally got the news I’ve been eagerly awaiting (and dreaming about–see last post) for the past couple of weeks: I’m going to be the 6th floor advisor in Totem Park’s Kwak house this year! “Crazy excited” does not even begin to cover how I’m feeling right now.

Since getting the news, I’ve been creeping all things Totem via the magic of the interwebz, and earlier today I stumbled upon the Totem Park Lipdup from this past year. I’ve posted it just in case some of the future Totem Park residents (like me!) need some reassurance that the place where they’re going to be spending eight months of theirs lives is, indeed, awesome. PS: Bret, you’re my favourite.

Also, since I didn’t post a song yesterday, here for your enjoyment are Matt & Kim and a dude dribbling a basketball.

week 2: thoughts and recollections from Guatemala

Our van driver chatted animatedly on his cellphone as he drove us up the precipitous roads through the mountains, evoking much nervous laughter.  Five hours of road stood between Xela and the village of Nebaj in a region primarily inhabited by indigenous peoples; 40-60% of Guatemalans are indigenous and there are approximately 26 native languages (The UN High Commissioner for Refugees, 2011). Along the way, we took note of political logos painted onto the sides of mountains and houses.  There was an election last year and this party won:

My understanding is that Guatemala is a developing democracy featuring fairly free elections and opposition parties, but a worrying degree of centralized power in ex-military hands (among other splotches). They have had both democratic and undemocratic rule at various points in their history.  But we did not focus on the role of the state so much in our studies.

Around lunch, we took a pit stop at the colourful town of Chichicastenango.



My memory of Chichicastenango consists of a seemingly never-ending street of textile shops overflowing with hand-woven bags and blankets, beaded keychains, and painted wooden masks.  There were plenty of Guatemalans browsing the shops, but the foreigners stood out.  They bargained with children and mothers in short Spanish phrases, while young boys, like magnets, ran up to them offering shoe-shining services.  Rebecca, in one of her reflection pieces on Marx, wrote about “the commodification of pity”; of how a disabled boy was put in a position where had to flaunt his disability to evoke pity in the tourist (and to subsequently spend money).  We spent an hour or so draining our fannypacks of Quetzals, the Guatemalan currency.  I am certain that a common theme all of us encountered on our trip was ambivalence towards our consumerism.  Many of us would second-guess our consumption of local products (for potentially fueling our “false needs” and/or making use of North American purchasing power and influence), but we also recognized that we were putting money into local economies.

After feasting at a buffet for lunch, we climbed back into the van and eventually rolled into the village of Nebaj.

Nebaj is a village with pot-holed streets and crumbling sidewalks, with overcast skies and occasional afternoon bursts of sun, with women in traditional long red skirts and embroidered tops selling food in the market, with children who frequent video arcades if they can earn a few coins from shoe-shining, with blue-painted convenience stores selling Pepsi products, with smiling faces greeting you at every moment–we had to say “buenos dias,” “buenas tardes,” or buenas noches” to everyone we passed on the street.  It is surrounded by mountains 360 degrees around, and it stretches out from the central town square to the rural fields.  Despite the pollution of diesel affecting  our heads and the fleas in my bed, I have an inexplicable love for that village that outdoes any other place we visited in Guatemala.

Yet, it is in the most civil war-torn region of Guatemala.  The civil war lasted from 1960, originating in a dispute with the American owned United Fruit Company, until 1996, ending with a peace treaty.  The indigenous people here were particularly caught up in the bloodshed because they were perceived by the government, for reasons most likely imbued with racism, to be natural allies of the leftist rebels.

As Rachyl commented, we were hard-pressed to see the effects of the civil war as outsiders.  I felt a definite gap between the smiling faces on the streets and the heartbreaking poems about massacres I read in my books.  I felt like we were only ever treading water at the surface of the community.  Likewise, even though I knew that 50% of Guatemalans under the age of 5 are chronically malnourished (World Food Programme), this sort of poverty mostly evaded the observation of a passing traveler.  We only really delved deeper when survivors of the civil war spoke out to us.

One of these men, a rebel during the civil war, invited us to his home.  We were first welcomed by his family: we fawned over his children, dressed up in traditional clothing, and learned how to, I suppose, spool wool….

…but he also told us of graver things.  Of a decade of hiding in the mountains, and of fighting for villages against government “scorch and burn” policies.  What he did not tell us is that many locals hold the rebels guilty for provoking more harm from the government.  The war is much too complex for me to understand.  He took us to a cemetery where villagers had been lain to rest in peace–rebels, neutrals, and army officers alike.  I still cannot fathom how brothers, literally brothers, fought each other.

Anyhow, upon arriving, we divided into two groups and were welcomed into our hotels.  I was told that my group’s hotel had a motto along the lines of “our home is your home.”  I would soon come to realize that this did not only mean that they would accommodate us like loving family, but that we would be accommodating them: every evening, we were subject to a giggling band of children in the courtyard; we were met in the early morning (think 3 a.m.) with the screwed-up moaning of a defunct rooster; and my bedding was of course infested with fleas.

I am glad it was like that though, because it made for a hell of a hilarious time for me and my roommate, Sara.  She never failed to make me laugh and I am so glad we became friends (although her intestinal amoeba named Victor tagged along unexpectedly).  We would share our beds with six other soon-to-become friends for study sessions.  In the case of Anna, it was more like nap sessions.  I was not initiated into friendship, however, without an interrogation into my character one night because I was apparently “vague” and “mysterious”  I think I can safely say that, after six weeks, they know me now…perhaps a little too well.

Three meals a day, we were fed delicious RESTAURANT FOOD here:

Each meal was accompanied by a wicked tropical fruit smoothie, hot chocolate, or various such configurations of parties in my mouth.  We were served a variety of meals, from pizadillas (pizza quesadillas!) to traditional Guatemalan food.  Namely: beautiful guacomole all day and everyday; breakfast of black beans, mushy plaintain, eggs, salsa, a slice of goat-tasting cheese, and those dreaded corn tortillas; and a sort of Guatemalan tamale, rather flavourless to me.

Our classes were located in a beloved cafe where the banana bread was divine  and the owners spoke English to us. (I will save my thoughts on coursework until the next post.) We soon grew affectionate for the people we met in our hotel, the restaurant, the cafe, and all the places in between.

To complement my coursework, I took a brief class on Ixil, the native language in the area.  It is a rather neat language.  At some point, Sara and I started asking oh so very relevant questions, like how to translate “my lover.”  The teacher miraculously managed, with my limited Spanish, to have a conversation with me about Guatemalan and American politics & religion.  I could not expect such miracles of understanding from all Guatemalans though–at many other moments during the trip, I wished desperately to break the language barrier and just speak to them without a translator.

I believe this video demonstrates a dialect of, or a similar language to, Ixil:

Click here to view the embedded video.

My first week in Nebaj was not without a hike in the countryside, where I was privy to the experience of developing a sunburn (for the first time in my life).  It was not a pretty sight.  The hike was, though:



Guatemala of course has its fair share of contradictions.  At the foot of a beautiful, cascading waterfall (OK, now I have taken the descriptive writing too far–pray tell me, where can you find a waterfall that is not cascading?), we encountered pollution.  Understandably, recycling is not exactly a priority when so many other issues exist.  But as a green at heart, I can think of exciting ways in which protecting the environment goes hand in hand with these other issues–for instance, indigenous land rights.


To end on a happy note, I did end up forgiving the children at our hotel.  They were just too adorable.  They threw a paper airplane into our room one night.  On it, “We play with you? Put an X.  Yes or No.”  You know we said yes.

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TPark dreamin’ and the return of Commuter Tunes

With all the craziness happening in my life over the last couple of weeks (little sister’s high school graduation, getting my braces off, Foster the People concert, my cells getting contaminated, etc.), I’ve been slacking on Commuter Tunes. So today, you get three wonderful songs to make up for it. Think of it as my Canada Day gift to you.

Also, word on the street is that first year residence assignments are supposed to be coming out very, very soon (which means I’ll get to find out where I’m advising, too!). I’m beyond excited. As in, I’ve dreamt about Totem for three nights in a row. I need help.

Without further ado:

1) Nothing is Anything (Without You) by Wintersleep. Wintersleep makes me happy to be Canadian, and they even headlined at AMS Block Party a few years ago. Awesome.



2) Take a Walk by Passion Pit. Warning: video may cause motion sickness. Seriously.

3) And last, but definitely not least, lovely Vancouverites Hey Ocean! covering Arcade Fire’s Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains). I get goosebumps every time.

week 1: thoughts and recollections from Guatemala

On the second last day of the trip, we visited the Canadian Embassy in Guatemala City.  The Canadian officials seemed eager for us to go home and share our stories, for it would “help.”  I had to wonder, what was that supposed to mean?  I could not quite envision it in positive terms, but in negative terms, I thought: what would happen if I did not share–if I came back home, tagged myself in some photos online, and kept my thoughts and recollections to myself?  That, I could not see myself doing.  I do not know if there is some responsibility of the traveler to share stories, but I know I choose to blog about this because it cannot hurt more to blog than to not.  I plan 6 blogposts for the following 6 Thursdays, more or less scrapping together the occupation of this particular consciousness, ending here in the red:

Before I move on, you might find this information I have compiled from the CIA World Factbook useful:

Guatemala

Population: 14,099,032 (July 2011 est.)
Comparative Size: slightly smaller than Tennessee
Languages: Spanish (official) 60%, Amerindian languages 40%
Religions: Roman Catholic, Protestant, indigenous Mayan beliefs
Urban population: 49% of total population (2010)
Climate: tropical; hot, humid in lowlands; cooler in highlands
Natural Resources: petroleum, nickel, rare woods, fish, chicle, hydropower
Natural Hazards: numerous volcanoes in mountains, with occasional violent earthquakes; Caribbean coast extremely susceptible to hurricanes and other tropical storms
Life expectancy at birth: total population: 71.17 years
Total fertility rate: 3.18 children born/woman (2011 est.)
Literacy Rate: 69.1%
Population below Poverty Line: 54% (2011 est.)
Brief History: “The Mayan civilization flourished in Guatemala and surrounding regions during the first millennium A.D. After almost three centuries as a Spanish colony, Guatemala won its independence in 1821. During the second half of the 20th century, it experienced a variety of military and civilian governments, as well as a 36-year guerrilla war. In 1996, the government signed a peace agreement formally ending the conflict, which had left more than 200,000 people dead and had created, by some estimates, some 1 million refugees.”

My travel experience prior to this trip more or less consisted of places like Kelowna, the suburbs around Seattle, and (through luck) Paris.  In what I believe to be a natural consequence of this fact, I was biting back tears as I stuffed my shoes into the plastic bin at the security check at YVR.  What was I doing shipping myself off to a developing country for six weeks (and to study philosophy and sociology with two profs and twenty students whom I did not know)?

The next forty-eight hours, I was still clench-fisted:  I endured the uncomfortable realities of human transit; we were brought to a motel surrounded by barbed wire in Guatemala City that apparently offered limitless vacancies for mosquitos; as in most developing countries, we had to throw our used toilet paper in the trash can because the toilets cannot handle it; and worst of all, as a fairly introverted person, I bunked with six other women in a room.  SIX HUMAN BEINGS INVADING MY SPACE!  Needless to say, I did not sleep a wink.

I was not without first impressions, though.  We landed around 7 p.m. to a dark city illuminated by strange orange fluorescent lights, almost like glowing specks of lava instead of the twinkling yellow in Vancouver.  As I stepped out of the boxy and humid airport into the night street crowded with copper faces, I swear my skin seemed several tones whiter.  Which was rather apt; whatever class, cultural, ideological, and other differences existed between our student group an hour before, dissipated away as I took on the identity of a first-worlder.   I was almost forcibly rich, white, Western, and like everyone else…

On the last day of class in Guatemala, I believe Mo commented that much of what we learned during our time here centered around, not so much Guatemalans, but us.  We were daily confronted with our “gringo” (foreigner) status, with our multiple identities, with our relationships with others.  I was definitely self-centric in that first moment in Guatemala.   But this is not necessarily a narcissistic, individualistic method of travel; if I learned anything from the course readings, it is that we cannot learn about Guatemalans without learning about ourselves.  Alison Jaggar (2006) says we cannot talk about women’s oppression around the globe without recognizing the Western historical forces that have subtly or directly influenced it.  For example, how can we talk about women’s poverty in developing countries without recognizing the springing up of informal economies, like women vendors on street corners,  in the face of global agricultural competition? Iris Marion Young (2003) likewise draws the connection between our everyday North American conventions of consumption, and the harrassment of women in sweatshops.   If we want to understand their struggles, sometimes we need to examine our sneakers.

The moment we hopped into our van and began our six hour bus trip to the second largest city, Quetzaltenango (commonly referred to as “Xela”), I began to relax.

We drove winding roads around mountainous fields or fieldish mountains, I could not tell.  Vertical agriculture is a thing there.  When you spend six hours driving past green and brown lands dotted with unassuming human figures, you cannot help but relax.  We hurriedly flipped through our papers, looking over some Spanish words in anticipation of meeting with our host families.  At a pit stop, I experienced corn tortillas for the first time—tasteless, flabby little things which I will never come to understand.

Somewhere along the way, we spent a couple of hours at the ruins of Iximche.  Iximche was a major site of confrontation between the indigenous and the Spanish conquistadors in the early 1500s.

Credit: Anna

I was to learn much more about Spanish colonialism in the coming weeks, but for the moment, I was mostly preoccupied with the collision between my 30-second, entertainment-wired attention span and the traditional Mayan wedding ceremony taking place before me.  I was also very fascinated to hear that the couple were to have a wedding in Church in October in addition to the Mayan ceremony.  Did someone just say religious fusion, multiplicity, and ambiguity?

We eventually plopped down, luggage and all, in a city that my words cannot describe.

Moments later, Chloe and I were following our host brother down the cobbled street to our new home.  We were literally speechless, neither of us knowing any Spanish, although we desperately wished to communicate with him.  After several awkward exchanges with our host mother and family (it took at least three tries to communicate which beds we would have), we settled into our rooms.

For the rest of the week, I was tutored basic Spanish from a young woman at a local community development organization, Pop Wuj.

I had a few things on my mind during this time.

Ronney

Our class was treated to three lectures by anthropology professor Ronney Alvarado of Universidad de San Carlos.  Ronney explained to me why I was staring at the hand-sized hole in the wooden planked floor of our classroom and listening to car honks punctuating the gaps between his words and the English translation.  He explained to us why were here, as animate particles of broader historical forces making us “volunteers” and Guatemalans “beneficiaries”.  In three brief lectures, he opened our minds to the concept of colonialism–what it meant, and still means in the lives of present-day Guatemalans.  Niles expressed a healthy dash of skepticism, reminding us that we must not lose sight of free will in a sweeping, self-determining narrative where every person’s choices are explained by Colonialism.  While this an important point, I do believe that Ronney was merely situating our free choices within an incredibly influential, social structural context.

One of the many other interesting ideas he shared with us was transcribed by Sara as such:

“This is the cost that Latin America paid for North American democracy. The East paid for the foundation of North American freedom. The ones who pay for …democracy don’t have it.” -Alvarado, Translated by Nick or Sylvia (?)

(This is not to take away from the democratic project, and the many courageous Western figures that fought for it.)  His point depends on the contested theory that democracies cannot fully develop without the foundation of a stable and growing economy.   It just so happens that modern Western democratic  thought  and action flourished on the foundation of economies growing through their global colonial reach.  The implication of this idea is that we, democratic nations, owe something to the non-democratic nations who funded us.  Interesting to consider a democratic twist to colonial effect.

Volunteering

Pop Wuj is involved with development projects, which meant we had the opportunity to volunteer building safe stoves in people’s homes.  Around 3 billion people in the world are daily exposed to air pollution in the form of smoke inhalation from fuel they use to cook their meals (like wood or animal dung) (World Health Organization, 2012).  It’s ridiculous.

So we hopped on a chicken bus (old American school buses, repainted and plastered with “Jesus” stickers, which served as transit) and landed here:

I know some people find enjoyment in occasionally doing hard labour, but I do not.  That is okay, but I wondered if experiencing labour of that sort is beneficial to self-development, morally obligatory, both, or neither?  My blistered hands hoped neither.

While I took breaks between softening bricks in water and pulling them out , I thought about the poverty surrounding me.  We were working in a yard of maybe 5 x 5 metres, and in the corner stood a shack of 5 x 3 metres.  This was the home of the family we were building for.  We met a very short woman with a heavily lined face who could barely speak Spanish.  I imagine she was much younger than she appeared.  Taking all this in, I was very…underwhelmed.  That is to say, there is something so dull about poverty.  It was not breathtaking and it did not particularly move me.

I would interpret that feeling as possibly occurring for three reasons.  First, third world poverty has almost been packaged as a sort of travel product.   Who does not know of well-intentioned students taking global volunteer trips? I think it might be the case that this new sort of travel sells moral rejuvenation or life-inspiration or some other such junk.  This is just speculation. Personally, the two other possibilities are more likely for me.  Second, I was a ethics/philosophy student experiencing the empirical manifestation of that theoretical “moral wrong” (we did not specifically study the ethics of poverty in our courses, so I have my doubts about if, why, and how much  global poverty is a wrong–but I’ll assume it is wrong for now).  Observing that empirical manifestation was underwhelming: physically speaking, poverty was the mere lack of brain neuroplasticity; lack of a body supplied with sufficient nutrients; lack of metres to move around in.  And yet, there is a non-physical level, some moral level, at which we perceive something much more extraordinary going on.  And so I marvelled at, and questioned, that gap in levels.  Third, poverty is an unsexy and quotidian condition.  It is not a bomb exploding or a sword through a back.  Hence, dullness.

[I also had some time to reflect on universalisms (for instance, the Kantian notion that we all have access to moral understanding, or the notion that there are globally acceptable human rights).  Critics of such universalism emphasize cultural, gender, epistemic and other differences that refute such “Western” concepts of universalism.  Seeing as I was in the home of one of those apparent non-Westerners, I thought about that a little but I have rambled enough for today, and will perhaps get back to this in the future.]

Illness

Speaking of the physical, I went through the ordeals of a digestinve illness a few days into the trip.  I successfully jumped over those first few hurdles: teaching myself how to swallow pills, visiting a medical lab on my own, and having to skip out on my host mother’s delicious meals.  I encountered both a hideous person (in character, of course) and a beautiful (kind) person during this time.  Which made me realize that no matter what lofty moral ideals I might have, what motivates me to do good is not the rational following through with a justified moral theory, but the feeling I get observing good people in action.  It is so impressionable.  I suppose it is like Alcibiades seeing Socrates embody his ideals.  Anyway, I would have a much more painful illness to come, as would most of the rest of our group.

Xela

As a result of my illness, I skipped out on a exploring the city beyond an afternoon gander in the oddly European Parque Central with Sara (foreshadowing our friendship to come).  I think I still owe you 3 Quetzals for that museum, Sara.

However, I have heard Xela to be Guatemala’s acclaimed “cultural capital.”  After having visited Guatemalan cities both big and small, I can safely say that it is relatively devoid of hegemonic Pepsi influence, and is indeed a beautiful city lying at the foot of a volcano.  The food, as accurately or inaccurately represented through my host mother’s meals, was hearty and enjoyable.  The people I met, good-humoured, kind, and surprisingly open (although I may have only encountered the ones in frequent contact with foreigners).  I slowly began to relax and feel safe in this country.  True friends, I had yet to make, but things were looking up by the end of the week.

Next time, we visit my favourite city in Guatemala, we begin our coursework, we make friends, and we plot plans to kill roosters.

Go Global Group Study Program Weblink.
Arts Research Course Abroad Award Program Weblink.  

Take My Money

No truer words have been said on TV, Fry.

A few years back, a friend and I had a running joke about the words “need” and “want” because in most cases when you say you “need something”, you actually don’t. To illustrate:

  • Need is when something is necessary, like when I whisper into the telephone to the police, “I NEED this stalker out of my house.”
  • Want is when you desire something, such as, “I really WANT my dad to stop asking me what am I doing when I am in the bathroom.”

In most cases, people say they need some sort of object, like a jacket, a new computer or some space. We’d correct each other and say, “Is that a need or a want?” or “What kind of space, like the one between your eyebrows and your hairline because it’s come soon, dude.” But then there are instances when we knew in the depths of our hearts that we really needed this object in our lives because it’s too awesome and for f***’s sake just TAKE MY MONEY NOW.

Here are some things I recently saw and then proceeded to throw money at my laptop screen but nothing happened because I realized that I am an unemployed student and the “money” I was throwing were pieces of my hopes and dreams. Yes, this just got dark fast. Now onto the beautiful objects of necessity.

Macbook Pro with Retina Display

TopBrewer Coffee faucet by Scanomat – with iPhone control

Leap

Monolito and Megalito carbon fiber table

GroundWave Shadow Trainer that teaches you how to dance