Saturday, May 26, 2012

I will miss Barcelona


I am leaving Barcelona, and I have done a TERRIBLE job of blogging to keep the memories. I've tried over the last couple of weeks to capture moments here and there, and it must be left somewhere!

The things that stand out over the last few months....




Can't even begin to describe this trip...East meets West in the most incredible city I’ve ever visited. Not only do you feel the force of modernity and history on every corner, but this breath taking, sprawling town is a testament of what this planet could be like if we figured out how to co-exist, instead of coming up with new ways to kill each other. The potential is incredible. 









Living in Europe was always my dream. And now I’ve done it - I’ve lived in Europe - but I don’t feel like I fulfilled the dream. Despite completely totally embracing the ex-pat lifestyle, something still feels beyond my reach. Maybe I thought living in Europe would make me a European. Or surely, marrying one would make me so - but clearly that didn’t work out. So now, a little older, a little wiser, a lot fatter, I return home. In these remaining weeks I’m trying to imbibe as much Europe as possible. A cafe con leche with a ciggarette at a sidewalk cafe.
 
Menu del dia at a Catalan restaurant. Leisurely Sunday on the beach with lunch in the sun. Being so broke that I walk home in heels for 1.5K.



 People watching - sidebar for the fact that this May’s weather seems to be rather scizophrenic, and people can’t figure out if its cold or warm out. 
You have a girl in a summer dress next to a woman in boots, a scarf, and a smart denim jacket. The sun plays peekabo and the temperature fluctuates 15 degrees a day. This is my time in Barcelona, drawing to a close.







Saturday, April 7, 2012

What I've learned so far


I’ve learned a lot of stuff in the MBA. Some of it valuable - like how to set up a T-account and why some economies grow faster than others - and some of it not so valuable - like how many classes a month I can come to hung over and still get away with it. I kid. 
But outside the classroom held as many lessons as inside the classroom. Here are some of them, and I will keep this theme going as things occur to me. 
1. Its not about you. Sometimes people are really nice and want to foster a relationship with you. Sometimes they aren’t. Sometimes they are really friendly and confide in you. Sometimes those same people - don’t. Its not about you. Almost ever. Its about THEM. Their mood. Their insecurities. Their stress. Unless you’ve done something to them…then its about you…but in all honesty, that’s rarely the case. 
2. Its hard to be optimistic sometimes. But what value is there in the alternative? Being prepared for the worst just makes the worst more likely to happen. If it happens its going to suck either way, whether you’re expecting it to or not. So might as well be optimistic. Envision success - you don’t actually have anything to lose. 

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Fall Term 2011

I didn't do a very good job of blogging this term, but I did snap the occasional picture and put it on Tumblr, but Tumblr doesn't let you export, so now I'm consolidating them here. I was having too much fun and doing too much "growing" to have the time to blog...but here it is!

Friday, September 30, 2011

Bar Crawl 2011

Bar Crawl 2011 - Trophy wives...The Vallfogona family.
 Throughout the night Steph kept saying - I'm jealous of them, I wish we were them, but I don't. This year is pure amazingness. The worst is behind you, you know what to expect, you have your friends, everything is just set into ENJOY mode. You just have to cherish every moment. And that's just priceless. I've never felt so happy to be in the moment I am, neither longing for the past nor the future. 

After the bar crawl, we all woke up this morning and eventually everyone climbed into my bed to look at pictures and swap what we did and didn’t remember from the night before. Then we threw on some form of clothing (though I think I walked out of the house fairly naked, as Julie commented that she could see my ENTIRE bra in the shirt I was wearing) and walked around Gracia until we came to Plaza de Vila de Gracia and had lunch at Amelie. We drank coffee, we ate salads, we gossiped, and the little Italian men played clarinets. Kathy said it best - we’re in a woody allen movie. Every part of it. I want to cherish every moment like today - what more could you want then sitting in a plaza with a pleasant breeze with good food and good friends and more or less not a care in the world? Life will never be this good again - MUST CHERISH THIS AMAZINGNESS> 

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Buh bye, Vancouver!

Well Vancouver, you and I didn't get off to a very good start, but in the end, I am sad to leave. I did a fairly terrible job of blogging while I was here, but I wanted to throw together the remaining memories I have of this place.

 New windshield wipers! The drizzly Vancouver summer, and my DUI-carrying co-pilot, necessitated me to buy new windshield wipers since the sound and ineffectiveness of the old ones makes our drive unbearable...at least, for him.

It took me a while to get into the swing of things at work, but the "Team building" event at the driving range helped!


Things got better as I started to make friends - the first step of which was my hiking/camping expedition to an island - I actually slept in a tent! For two nights! Not entirely sure how I survived...

And of course, this summer wouldn't have left any kind of positive taste in my mouth without one particular individual. 


I feel like my time in Vancouver was a bit of a Cinderella story that starts of with the sad maid who hates her life, and then makes friends with the animals, gets a fairy god mother and meets her Prince Charming.

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Vancouver is amazing!

Vancouver is an absolutely fantastic city! Even if the internship thing doesn't turn out to be my dream job, I would absolutely love to live here! This city has it all - nature, culture, food, and incredibly friendly people.

This weekend Alicia came to visit me from Hawaii - she's generally following me around the world these days as she's moving to Barcelona in October. The first day, we explored Stanley Park, which was absolutely beautiful. We started off in the forest along what I guess you could call a VERY easy hiking trail and ended up at Beaver Lake:

We kept on in the general direction of the beach and although we got lost a couple of times, we finally did make it there and had a delicious overprice drink and snack at the Teahouse Restaurant.

We then took a VERY long walk along the beach and the Seawall and all the way through Yaletown - I think we walked for a grand total of three hours that day. 

That night, after some failed attempts at hitting up the party scene in this town (I'll be sure to make more) we ended up in an amazing bar called The Pourhouse where we proceeded to spend the next 3 evenings. The bar tenders are super knowledgeable about alcohol and the entire 1920's culture of speak easys and prohibition. I've literally never learned so much in a bar in my entire life.

The next day we went to Granville Island, where I felt like I'd died and gone to heaven. This place has it all - art, music, alcohol, and most importantly - FOOD! We started off by strolling through the market where we were AMAZED by all the different goods and goodies on sale. Then we went to find the last performance of the Jazz Festival that was taking place in the city that week. On the way back to get some food, we checked out all the jewelry makers and stopped by the Granville Brewing Co to do some beer tasting:
We them sampled all the fares of the market - well, not all, but plenty. I clearly bought too much food because as I was sitting and enjoying my dessert - a white chocolate blueberry roll - it fell out of my hand and was DEVOURE by a seagull, despite the fact that the roll was 3 times as wide as this things beak. Definite highlight. We then stumbled upon a random circus act performed on a sail boat by two random French people (its not the best picture):
At the end of the day we came back to the Pourhouse to listen to some live jazz and get some more lessons in  1920's alcohol culture. Apparently there are all kinds of crazy alcohol laws in Vancouver, including not being able to serve people who are standing up. We ended up there the next night too! On Alicia's last night we went out in Kits and found a place that was serving 50 cent chicken wings with some very friendly foresters. Apparently, forrestry is the big industry in this "province". Guess that makes sense! 

Monday, July 4, 2011

Summer Home

This weekend, I moved in to my apartment for the summer! Its pretty bare which makes it somewhat depressing, but I'm sure Ikea will help me make it a little more homey, despite the $100 budget I've set for myself there.

The bedroom: (I ended up moving the bed later, and didn't take another picture. It is now in the corner, which actually leaves a big hole behind the head because the windowsill prevents it from being flush with the wall. But I couldn't handle it where it was - I need to feel the stability of a wall. Plus, there were street lights pouring in through the blinders and it was very creepy - right on my eyes:





The living room: Not much to say about it. Nice couch. No TV. Yawn. I think I'll buy tealights for that weird thing in front of the fireplace: 
The kitchen is miniature and I don't want to depress my mom by even posting it. Basically the way its set up - and this set up is non-negotiable - prevents you from opening up both the fridge and oven all the way. Independently - not at the same time. You simply cannot open them fully - forget about standing in FRONT of it while doing so. It does prevent fridge-grazing, however. 
The bathroom's fine except the hose the hold-in-ur-hand shower is on is such an awkward length I can't help spraying the ENTIRE bathroom with water if I happen to drop it. But that's pretty classic.