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Speed Renting: The New Way to Find Future Roommates!

Hey IPP,

We know a lot of you are currently looking for accommodation for the next academic year off-campus and will likely need to share your accommodation with roommates.  Finding a roommate can be a stressful undertaking given the time involved and competing priorities. Also, as for many of us this may be our first time renting a house or apartment off-campus this can be a bit of a stressful undertaking. But don’t worry! Help is available!

 To support you with your efforts, on March 9, 2011 UBC Residence Life is partnering with Speed Renting Canada, to provide you with an opportunity to meet potential roommates.

 The UBC Roommate Meet-Up will be a fun opportunity to socialize with other UBC students who are looking for a place to live. The price of admission is $8, which will include free food and refreshments. In addition, all attendees will be entered into a draw for the chance to win great prizes courtesy of Skullcandy, one of the world’s top headphone companies.

 The event will take place at the Marine Drive Commons block ballroom and will run from 5:30-7pm.

 To register for this event, you can visit www.speedrenting.ca/ubc

 For more information, please contact info@speedrenting.ca

Looking for more info?  Check out the Speed Renting Poster: SpeedRenting_FINAL

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‘Pura Vida’: A Mindset, A Lifestyle

The most important thing I learned in Costa Rica was ‘Pura Vida’. It was more than just an expression or a friendly greeting, it was a mindset and a lifestyle. Every morning, my host family greeted me with a smile and a cheerful ‘Pura Vida’, no matter how hard it was raining and how gloomy it was outside.

  On the second day at my host families’ home, I lost the key to my room. I was absolutely horrified as I did not know any Spanish, and had no idea how to explain this to my host family. I went to the Señora and attempted to explain it to her using French words as I found they were pretty similar, and a whole lot of body language. I guess my message somehow got across to her, as she went to get the jar of spare keys, and together we tried every key until we found the right one. It took a while, and when we finally found the spare key to my room, we laughed together and she warned me not to lose it again, but with a smile on her face. I apologized for losing the key, and she simply said ‘Pura Vida’, and told me to come down for dinner soon. That seemed to be her answer to everything, in such a wonderful way. The constant smile on her face comforted me when I was feeling slightly homesick. However, it wasn’t just the Señora. 

 Señor Sosa, the owner of our host home and one of the Señora’s 8 children, was an incredibly friendly person, although he seemed quiet at first. After we attempted to communicate a couple of times, he sat with us and told us about his wife and his children. He even ate dinner with us on our last night at our host families’ home. I was touched by our host family, especially when they packed us little coconut sweet treats for our day trip to Cahuita National Park. Everything they did for us was thoughtful and gracious. They helped make my Costa Rican experience the amazing adventure that it was, and is. 

 Grace Lee, Group Leader, IPP

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A Costa Rica Reflection

Hola,
 
  Mi nombre es Joe.  For those who don’t know me, I am a senior peer from the Dunbar group and one of the IPP members, along with Craig, Grace, Janet and Silvere, to travel to Costa Rica this reading break for a Go Global ISL project. I am sorry that I couldn’t blog about my feelings before the trip because I had some unfinished business to do (aka midterms) the Thursday night before my trip. To tell you the truth, I didn’t start packing until late night before my flight at 7:30 a.m in the morning. I didn’t sleep that night, worried that I would sleep in and miss my flight. So I was up all night figuring whether if I had missed any important items to bring.
 
    My travel to San Jose, Costa Rica was a 3 hour plane ride to Phoenix and then 5 hours from Phoenix to Costa Rica. Transiting through U.S customs, the officer asked me why I was going to Costa Rica. So, I showed him my paper stating it was on an educational tour for a week. Then he asked more questions, ” What are you learning?”. I paused and replied, “Sustainability… ya sustainability (trying to sound smart)”. The broad answer of “sustainability” seem to impressed him to let me pass through customs, but actually I didn’t know what I was talking about. I didn’t even know what I was going to do in Costa Rica nor do I know what sustainability means. My honest answer would have been, ” I don’t know but I will tell you when I come home!” 
 
    We knew that we would be settling in Gandoca, a village at the very south Carribbean coast of Costa Rica close to the border to Panama but we didn’t know it would be another 5 hours drive. The road to Gandoca was a fun ride mixed with sleep and Spanish songs. Ignacio, our biologist/interpreter, tried his best to keep us awake, telling us about facts or issues about different sceneries as we drove by them. Upon arrival to Gandoca we split into host families, where we lived and ate. For me, due to some unexpected circumstances to my surprise, I had the previlage to switch to three different host families. Everyone of them were very nice and everyone of them had different type of meals. Out of that, I got to taste Costa Rican food from three different families. This made my experience in Gandoca even better.  What I also learned about these people is that they live a simple life. By simple, I mean they have their basic necessities  (water, electricity, food, appliances to cook their food) but nothing more (no computer, rarely any TVs, iPODs, cell phones, or any other electronics that spoil us today in developed cities). And because of this you can feel a sense of belonging to a community in Gandoca. For example, most of the locals would come out to the field to play soccer, something that we wouldn’t have the chance to do in Vancouver either due to weather or other distractions going on in life! It seems that our society today is lacking this closeness and sense of community. Ironically, technology is bringing us apart, and not any closer.  This is something we can learn from the locals in Gandoca.
 
    Although service was not our main priority on this trip, learning and learning to critcally think were heavily stressed. Our topic on sustainability was one of the broader topics we discussed. According to an online dictionary, sustainability means” to keep existence, or to maintain”. However, we would like to slightly change that definition a bit. Upon endless discussion with Ignacio and the rest of the members through different perspectives and comparisons, we realized that sustainablility is more like a juggling act of balls if you can imagine it as a metaphor. The “balls” or topics cycling are: Environmental, Social, and Economical issues attached to sustainability. To be sustainable, each ball, which is interconnected with each other, must be maintained or “juggled” in balance. What I am saying is that when we focus on environmental issues, we must also take in consideration of the social and economical aspects of the community, and vice versa. When we think like this, we see the bigger picture in the background, which we normally wouldn’t see if we focused on our own perspective or narrowed ourselves to one view. If we can maintain and balance this juggling act, then sustainability can be achieved.
 
To sum up my journey to Costa Rica, here are my top 10 moments from this trip…. [ drum roll please…..]
 
    #10. Forgetting about school and midterms or all the distractions in my life
      #9. The long five hour ride to Gondaca, with “Bem, Bem, Maria” as our ride music.
      #8. Drinking out of a coconut
      #7. Beach Patrol and Beach Cleanup
      #6. The natural alarm clock: monkeys and rooster waking you up in the morning
      #5. Soccer game with the locals
      #4. Living in three different host families and tasting their meals.
      #3. Our trip to Cahuita National Park: looking at poisonous snakes and being chased by angry/hungry monkeys!
      #2. The many nights of card games and “Mafia”
      
 
        and #1. My memories on this trip with everyone….Memories without Borders!
 
 
Pura Vida!
 
     Joe Ho, Senior Peer, IPP

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