Friday, August 29, 2008

It ain't Tijuana








Mexico City

Day 1
Arrival at 2:30
Subway to hostel at Zocalo
Dinner-Taqueria
Alameda/Centro Historico/Palacio de Bellas Artes

Day 2
Basque de Chapultepec
Museo Nacional de Anthropologia
Paseo de la Reforma
Lunch-Street food (Tortas y tortillas)
Parque Espana + Parque Mexico
Condesa
Lunch-Cantina with Rafael
Zona Rosa
Paseo de la Reforma back home

Day 3
Three Cultures Square
basilica de Guadalupe
Teotihuacan

8/27
공항에 내려서 2000페소(20만원) 을 깨느라 30분을 소비했다. 결과는 구지폐라 이제는 쓸수가 없다는것!! 그지폐는 정은이가 가져온 것인데 출처가 분명치 않다. 멕시코에 간다니 누군가 준것. 이제부터 우리의 지하철타기 공포가 시작되었다. 12000원하는 택시값을 아낀다고 200원하는 지하철을 탔다. 우리가 있는 호스텔까지 세번을 환승했는데 환승구간이 엄청 길었다. 한 번 환승에 5분은 걸렸던 것 같다. 거의 25키로에 족하는 가방을 들고다녔으니.. 나중에 멀미 구토 현기증 증상까지 생겼다. 댄은 호스텔에 도착하자마자 나한테 앞으로는 내 짐을 들어줄 수 없으니 짐을 줄이라고 했다. 헉,, 댄의 복대가 땀으로 다 젖어서 그안에 있는 여행자수표까지 완전 젖었다. 의자에 한장씩 올려놓고 말렸는데 좀 웃겼다.
멕시코시티 호스텔은 위치도 좋구 시설도 참 맘에 든다. 숙소에 도착하자마자 지하철타느라 고생한 나머지 오자마자 정은과 나는 짧은 반바지로 갈아입고 저녁을 먹으러 나갔는데 밖에 있는 남자들이 우리를 너무 쳐다봤다. 식당에서도 한남자가 정말 1분에 2번씩 흘끔흘끔 쳐다봤는데 주변을 보니 짧은 반바지를 아무도 안입어서 다들 그렇게 쳐다본듯했다. 날씨도 춥고 기분도 별로 좋지 않아서 호스텔에 가서 다시 반바지를 갈아입었다. 댄은 극심한 땀을 흘린 관계로 1시간정도 잠을 청하고 정은이와 나는 소칼로로 나갔다.
광장앞에 감동적인 멕시코 국기(이름이 뭘까?), 한 번도 태극기 보고 이런 감정 느낀 적 없는데 가슴이 찡했다 . 광장주변 가게를 돌아 보았다. 이렇게 많은 상점들이 한 지역에 이렇게 많은 것은 처음 보았다. 댠대단한 규모라 … 나중에 테오티우아칸 가는 길에 끝없이 이어지는 빈민촌 달동네를 보았다. 스케일이 한국 달동네와는 비교할 수없었다.

8/28

어제 저녁 일찍 잠을 청했다. 밤중에 여러번 깼다. 8명이 쓰는 방에 특히 20대 초반의 젊은이들(밤문화를 즐기는, 우리들이 이방에 열령대를 몹시 높였다는 특히 내가) 왔다갔다 부선하게 움직이는데 내잠을 깼다. 하지만 우리도 아침 7시부터 일어나서 전날 저녁 복수를 해주었다. 고의적이라 할 수 없는… 첫날 하는 사워라 이것 저것 서툴렀다. 내일 부터는 수건만 두루고 샤워장으로 직진(다음날 그렇게 했음)할 것이다. 하루종일 시내를걸었다. 유럽에 가본적 없는 댄은 많은 건축 양식에 반했다. 내가 처음에 멕시코시티를 우리의 일정에 넣었을 때 별로 안 내켜했니만…

As you can see from the pics above, we are knee deep in Mexico City. A few things of note that I've learned about the city:
As of 1995, Mexico City had the most polluted air in the world to the point that the air quality on 9 out of 10 days was classified as "unsafe" by environmental standards. It has since gotten better, although, as you can see from my feet above, there is still plenty of pollution in the air.

In 1968, students protesters were slaughtered at 3 Cultures Square at the (alleged)order of the President at that time, Luis Echeverria. This was supposedly in an attempt to prevent the protests from being covered by the international media prior to the 68 Olympics held in Mexico City and tarnishing the Games for the host. The suppression of protests succeeded, in so far as that the truth didn't come out until 1970 when the president left office. Hearing this, I thought of how Seoul students protested in 1988 before their nation hosted the Olympics, but with much more success. Many Koreans remember 1988 proudly in Seoul because it functioned as a coming out party for the "Hermit Kingdom" and the students protests for more democracy leading up to the games led to great strides in personal and political freedom within the nation. This is how many have hoped the 2008 Olympics in China would function, but you'll have to ask Gabel how that's working out. Still, I found the 20 year gap in emerging economies/democracies hosting the games (Mexico City 68, Seoul 88, Beijing 08) and each nation's reaction to protests leading up to the games to be interesting.

Outside of the Centro Historico, Mexico City reminds me of South East Asia (Thailand and the Phillipines specifically). I think it's the wide avenues, "functional" modern architecture, pollution, and vegetation. It's not the climate because its surprisingly mild here, due to being at 2000 ft.. It feels like early October in Cleveland/NYC. I did not expect this, but it's quite a pleasant surprise.

Centro Historico, Alameda, and Zocalo are beautiful and I'm glad we're staying around all these places because they were our first impression of the city. Zocalo is the main square and it is as grand as grand can be. This is what we walked up into after riding the subway from the airport (more on that later), and I was blown away by the size of this square and the old colonial architecture. Walking around, the details in each building and the charms of each alley and street were amazing. Alameda, the largest park in Centro Historico was also a nice introduction to the city. Within the park are the monument pictured above and Palacio de Bellas Artes, a grandiose theatre/arts center that is also pictured above. I think the reason this all impressed me so much is because pretty much everywhere I've traveled is "new." By "new," I mean, not old like Europe. I've travelled Asia and the US quite extensively and all the "old" things I've seen are asian structures. I've never seen the old European style architecture. Most people who've traveled to Europe would enjoy The Centro Historico, but not to the degree that I did. It felt completely new to me.

To save money, we took the subway from the airport to the hostel with about 100 lbs. of luggage. This was stupid. Don't ever do this, especially when taxis cost very little (we saved about $11). A few notes on the subway, because I believe subways and airports teach us about what cities are and what they aspire to be. The Mexico City subway system is efficient and fairly clean. However, when you transfer between lines at each station you have to walk between 500-1000m. I do not think this is an exaggeration, although the fact that we were lugging 100 lbs. of luggage and had to transfer 3 times may have made the distance between lines seem longer.

Of course I have to talk about the food. Street tortillas and tortas (pictured above) were the highlight so far, and yes Mores, communication in this situation was an adventure, but in a good way. The women making these were unbelievably friendly and as Sue said, "had very kind faces." I couldn't agree more, although I found the kindness of their cooking to have made more of an impression. We also enjoyed a more common meal in Condesa, a seemingly gentrified area where we met my former co-worker Erin's fiance Rafael. He was a great host and ordered us up some excellent "cantina" food that we enjoyed with some tequila served with lime juice and Clamato. Tasty! Our other great food experience was a family style meal on a tour of Teotihuacan. This was a great chance to sample a lot of different dishes, all of which were delicious, but all of which I have forgotten the names of. I should have taken notes, but I was too busy chowing down.

Teotihuacan was nice, but not as great as we would have hoped. It was once the largest city in North America (somewhere between 100,000-500,000 people )and has been in the process of being excavated for over 100 years. It also contains the 3rd largest pyramid (in mass, not height) in the world. Impressive in theory, but when we got there, I found myself bored. It was a mini-accomplishment to climb the pyramid (which wasn't that hard, but killed my lungs for some reason), but overall, not that great.

I think the reason I didn't enjoy the pyramids all that much is because anthropology and artifacts usually don't float my boat. I know its ignorant, but my general feeling is, "seen one clay pot, seen them all." Therefore, I was leery of the Museo Nacional de Anthropologia. I shouldn't have been, because what I've come away with so far from there and my other experiences is how vibrant and colorful all aspects of Mexican life are. The dress, architecture, paintings, churches, etc. are all totally different from their European counterparts. They don't feel historical. They feel alive. I never thought I'd enjoy wandering around a church, but when it's in the Moorish style, or contains tribal elements in color, it's much more interesting. These Tribal/European hybrids can be found everywhere: clothes, art, food, etc. and I think it's a great place for us to start our voyage.

A note on the Swill: Beer is decent, although I was looking forward to more Dos Equis. It's hard to find and a little more expensive than other beers. The tequila i've tried had been smooth, lending to the theory that American's idea of tequila isn't tequila at all.

Yet to come (Days 4 and 5). . .
Coyoacan

Plaza Garibaldi
San Angel
Mercado de la Merced

Virginia is for lovers












































차이니스 버스를 타고 뉴욕에서 버지니아비치에 2년만에 다시왔다. 역시 댄의 이모의 가족은 모든 것을 동원해서 우리를 환영해 주었다. 성대한 아침 식사를 시작으로 Jet Ski를 타러 갔다. 이모, 이모부가 댄의 대학원 졸업 선물로 비용을 대주었다. 운전을 잘 못하는 나로써는 너무나 재미있는 경험이었다. 교통체증이 없는 대로를 무제한 스피드로 운전하는 기분이라고나 할까? 정은이 나에게 물을 튀기고 도망가서 내가 복수하려고 하다가 실수로(?) 정은 오토바이를 박아서 물속으로 튕겨나갔다. 멍이 한 3주는 간듯... ㅋㅋㅋ 곧장 해변으로 가서 수영도 하고 맥주도 아이스 박스에 숨겨서 마시고(미국은 공공장소에서 술마시는게 불법이다)...댄은 친척들과 ㄱ집에서 담소를 나누는 동안 우리는 해변을 신나게 즐겼다. 정은이 안 왔으면 나 혼자 해변에 나올 뻔 했다...(나와 정은은 참고로 물이라면 사족을 못쓴다) 저녁으로 이모님이 우리 모두 기절한 환상의 linguini with white clam sauce를 먹었다. 이모님은 샤도네이 와인을 매일 병째 소비하신다. 옥상에 올라가서 이모님 이모부님과 이런 저런 얘기를 나누었다. 미국선거, 대통령, 당신들의 가족사, 유머(특히 이모부님은 진한 농담꾼으로 유명하다) 등등 미국어른들과 얘기하면 이야기 소재가 무궁무진하다. 다음날 아침에 브런치를 먹고 날씨 관계로 집에서 WII를 처음으로 해보았다. 한국 가면 하나장만해야지 할 정도로 너무 재미있었다. 특히 테니스할 때 내가 너무 티브이로 들이 대어서 이모님이 많이 긴장하셨다. 티브이 깨질까봐 ㅋㅋㅋ 2박 3일 동안 정은이에게 미국 가정을 보여주고 한동안 못볼 댄의 친척과 좋은 시간을 보냈다.

Back before we left we went to Virginia Beach to visit my Aunt Mary, Uncle Jim, Cousin Patrick, his wife Liz, and their two sons Parker and Kellen. Highlights of the trip included:
-Experiencing the Chinatown bus there and back. I had forgotten the angry passengers, pushy employees, and general lack of preparation that comes with a $70 roundtrip bus ticket. On the return leg, one woman shouted to be let on the bus, only to be informed that she hadn't followed protocol by checking in early. I was in the same predicament 2 years ago, had a worse reaction (shouting + cursing), but was lucky enough to have a cousin who had just passed the bar exam whose profession I could drop to threaten the company with legal action. Was it right? Of course not. Is Jim still angry at me to this day because of it? Yep. Did I get on the bus that day? Proudly.

-Getting to experience the joys of jet skiing thanks to the generosity of Mary and Jim, who paid for Sue, Jung-Eun and I to enjoy 1 hour with Pat and Liz in the Atlantic. For those of you who haven't done it, i highly recommend it, although watch out for the exhaust fumes and for Sue if she happens to be in the water with you. She's a cold-blooded bitch out there. Ask Jung-Eun.

-Getting to see enjoy the weekend sitting around and chatting with Jim, Mary, Pat, and Liz was a blast. Mary, you fed us enough for our whole trip (deliciously) and it was great to get to see Parker and Kellen before we left. Goodtimes.

Thursday, August 28, 2008

With the people of Cleveland, who've suffered for so many years







(Again, this is before the trip, but I didn't get a chance to post it yet)

Epiphany-Cleveland is great when you’re in the right mindset. For instance if you're thinking "maybe we could have kids and raise them here and send them to Westlake High School." Yes, I am old.

Went to a Tribe game. Threatened Sue with season tickets to at least 1 major sports team if we ever came back to Cleveland.

Ate at Lolita, Michael Symon’s (the Iron Chef) restaurant. Let me tell you about the meat platter for two. Various prosciutto (3 varying degrees of spiciness), duck prosciutto, tenderloin, and a couple other meats on a wood block with dried bread to make your own crostinis. I would recommend Boehmer move to Cleveland just for this. Mores, you gotta go check it out next time you’re in town. In fact everyone, everywhere should eat at this restaurant if they live in Cleveland and move here to eat there regularly if they don't.

Had a BBQ with family and friends back in Cleveland and it was great to see so many familiar faces. Thanks for coming everybody. Sorry we didn’t get to chat more. As you saw I was busy on the grill.

It was great to be home with Mom, Dad, and (through a stroke of good luck) Shannon. I’ll miss them a lot, but I can’t think of a better way to start our trip than back home in Cleveland.

Now When She Went To Chicago That Night . . .



In a bit of a gonzo move, we did Chicago in 11 hours, driving in at 10 AM and returning to Cleveland at 9 PM, all by car a few days before we left the US. Was it foolish? Yes Did it save us money? Absolutely Was it a good preparatory budget trip for our voyage? I think so.

My impressions of Chicago (although I’ve been there 5+ times now):

If I wanted to show someone what a great AEMRICAN city looks and feels like, I’d send them to Chicago. It’s well-planned, well-taken care of, and FEELS like America.

(New York is a great city, but it’s a world city, not an American one. If someone just went to NYC, they wouldn’t have an accurate picture of America at all.)

We walked around Millennium and Grant Park to start, checking out the new pavilion that Frank Gehry designed and the extraterrestrial sculpture (which had to be influenced by Flight of the Navigator, that Disney movie with the T2 looking spaceship, right?) went up to Lincoln Park on the subway (ho-hum), went to the art museum for a free night, had stuffed pizza at Eduardo’s (I’m sure that there are better places, and I know it’s a chain, but damn, it doesn’t disappoint), went to a free orchestra performance at the pavilion in Millennium Park, then high-tailed it out of there. A little tiring, but the voices of the right kept me awake all the way home.

These vagabond shoes . . .


A few thoughts on moving out of NYC:

Ubox worldwide shipped all our important stuff (13 boxes in all) for an extremely reasonable price. It remains to be seen if they will arrive on time, in one piece (or in 13 pieces, but together), and to the right place. However, things have worked out well so far.

When Jay and Jen moved to Seville, Spain temporarily for a few months earlier this year, I remember talking to Gabel at their going away party about our New York experiences. We came to the conclusion that I, living in the Bronx and being lame by saving money and not going out, had not had the New York experience that most imagine. I didn’t live in a fun neighborhood. I rarely went out to meet new people. I went to new restaurants, but nowhere near as many as I could have. I had few walking around drunk at 6AM in Central park evenings. The lesson here: move to NYC before you’re married when you have no qualms about going out, sinking into debt, and enjoying yourself at the expense of your health. I did all that in Korea before I met Sue, but without the debt, so I guess I did ok.

I wish I had done more things that every tourist does. I never went to the Met, the statue of Liberty, the Empire State Building, or a bunch of other places I should have.

I will miss NYC, but I won’t (or at least don’t want to) live here again. It was fun while it lasted and I recommend it highly, but you can only take so many years of it without becoming completely oblivious to everyone around you.

Sue and I both agreed that we hate goodbyes. Sorry for running away to a taxi during our farewell dinner in Astoria.

As a fat man, I will miss Peter Luger’s the most, with the Brooklyn Brewery a distant 2nd.

Finally, moving sucks. Don't ever do it. Just stay where you are forever.

Airports will be studied by future archaeologists like the pyramids in 10000 years



A lot of people asked us how we were feeling before we left. The assumption was that we were brimming over with excitement and enthusiasm to start our trip. A lot of you (quite understandably) wanted us to feel this way because you’re our friends and family, but also because you’d like to get the hell out of town and travel yourselves and if given the opportunity we have, would be fired up like a hot air balloon to get on the road. At the risk of being offered a wide variety of cheeses to go with my disposition, I must admit that, sitting in the airport, waiting to leave Chicago on our way to Mexico, we both decided that we felt less than buoyant about the trip. Our defining emotion was stressed out. But before you put up a photo of Sue and I labeled “ungrateful whiners” to throw darts at, let me explain.

In the past, both of us have travelled fairly extensively. Sue throughout Europe, Asia, and the US and I in Asia and the US. Before every trip (even the Jewitt family Chicago trip I ruined by being a jerk/14 year-old), both of us have been excited about travelling to the point of being unable to sleep well for a day or more before in anticipation of the trip. Travelling has always been like Christmas to us. The past few nights before this trip, on the other hand, have been so full of errands, day trips, and managed chaos that we haven’t had much time to contemplate the trip. Even if we did have time in the past week, the fact of the matter is that we have spent the past 10 months planning, contemplating, fantasizing about, and generally mentally preparing ourselves for the trip. For those of you that hung out with us in NYC, we were pretty lame for a good chunk of the past 10 months in the service of saving money for the trip. We stayed in and dreamed about this trip, re-organizing and shaping where we would go, when we would go, what we would do, etc. Not a day went by when we were not in posession of at least one travel guide, and we generally had 3-5 at once. Many of you know how frustrating and difficult I felt my job to be the last year, and planning and dreaming of this trip helped me get by. Same goes for Sue. Her job was completely for the purpose of financing this trip and she was unhappy at the job’s lack of challenges almost immediately. In other words, we have dedicated ourselves to this trip for the past 10 months and now that it’s here, it’s almost as if it isn’t real. It’s been like making a Christmas list 10 months in advance and checking and re-checking it repeatedly over that span. In the end, no matter how great Christmas is, it feels sort of anti-climactic.

However . . . . I’m happy to say that now that the plane is over the Midwest (and after a nap) I feel a hell of a lot better about the trip. Maybe it was hearing the Spanish over the PA, or maybe it’s just finally feeling buoyed (literally as opposed to figuratively) by this trip that’s doing it. In any case, this is when the planning ends and the trip begins and it’s going to be a lot different than even my most vivid fantasies.

I’m still worried about my Spanish though, despite Jen’s best efforts to give me resources.

-Dan

Saturday, August 23, 2008

And so it begins (err, began) . . .





This is where we'll be posting on our trip. We haven't officially departed yet, but I'm a big fan of prologues, so we're going to start off with postings about visiting Virginia Beach, moving out of our apartment, our last days in New York, a week in Cleveland with my family, a day in Chicago, a word on how we planned everything out, what we packed/bought for the trip, and why we're doing this.

Format wise, we're planning on posting in both Korean (via Sue) and English (via me). The title, obviously, reflects this. The Korean and English of the title are roughly the same; the Korean translates to "The Garbage Can Trip," but it took some time to choose "swill" as the perfect English word (in so many ways) to describe our trip.

More to come soon. Comment to keep us posting. Gabel, you're going down.

PS-Apologies for everything being out of order. It'll be back on track once we have regular internet access.