Showing posts with label Europe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Europe. Show all posts

Monday, April 21, 2014

Buy That Ticket!!!


Hi,

We haven’t spoken before, but I know what you are going through.  You are not alone in this world.  You are not the only one that questions your life every single day.  We've all been taught that we should never question the system we live in and just be happy with our meager existence working jobs we hate, to buy crap on credit cards that we pay off for the rest of our lives.  Being a leader in today's world and making change is dangerous.  This is not how life has to be my friend.  There is a rebellion of free thinkers out there that no one will tell you about because they don’t go along with the system.  These people have found happiness in traveling the world and making experiences instead of buying new coffee tables and cars.  We are out there, but you have to speak first. 

San Diego


Let me tell you my story…For 30 years of my life, I was a typical guy from the Midwest who was more afraid of nuclear war then snake bites and bee stings because cable TV sold me those fears.   Almost a year ago, I basically packed up what clothes and possessions could fit in my car, every “priceless” memory I was holding onto my entire life that could not fit, got thrown away.  This was the hardest moment of my life!  After 5 years of living in Ohio, I escaped to join the rebellion to San Diego, CA.  My trip was unique in that I Couchsurfed (Couchsurfing.org) for an entire month from city to city, 14 in total, but I’ve also seen 37 US states now and 7 countries. 

240 pounds at 22 years old

At my lowest I lost 70 pounds



Let me back up a step.  I started my career in Wisconsin and ended up in Ohio for 5 years and worked a typical boring "Office Space" engineering job for many years.  After becoming jaded with the corporate system over the years in job after job telling me how amazing their workplace was and why I should come work for them, I ended up leaving a 7 month position, very unhappy and unhappy with life overall in the Midwest.  I found that my open mindedness and health conscious decisions made it hard to make friends in Ohio, because if you aren’t from Ohio they don’t want you there.  The same holds true for my hometown friends who still hang out in the same place with the same people they did a decade ago.    



Three years ago, I was fortunate to meet my first French friend in Ohio.  I had no idea, but international people have just as hard of a time befriending Midwesterners.  Through networking parties, I got to hang out with 50+ people at a time.  This was awesome for me actually because where I’m from, no one spoke anything but Spanish.  Now I was surrounded by people from all over the world!  They were very welcoming because they had no friends and had more open minded views. I grew up an overweight kid in poverty in Wisconsin and I had lost 70 pounds back in Madison and now had just quit the highest paying job of my life.  

My second half marathon


After a week, I hadn’t told anyone I left my job for the first time in my life and had no backup.  I was nervous as hell, because this was the first time I had nothing lined up in 7 years.  One thing to note is that in those 7 years I had never really gone on more than a weekend vacation.  A week later after being jaded looking at new jobs that all sounded equally "Office Space"-ish, I was invited out for, as my friend Enrico called it, a "beer that changed my life".  My international friends and I joke about it now.  At the time, I felt down in the dumps for being so careless.  Friday night I get a text from my Italian friend Enrico, didn't want to go out.  I just wanted to wallow in my misery.  Enrico had 4 friends out that said “just come out for one.”

Amalfi Coast, Italy


I joined them at a bar that had the biggest worldwide craft beer selection in town.  Upon entering, to my right I have an energetic Italian couple and to my left a more reserved looking German friend and his Indian girlfriend.  I had hung out with these guys a lot, but this time was different.  Honestly, I was anxious to get home and sulk.  They asked what I was doing and I said looking for jobs.  They were shocked and asked "what the hell man!?"  Over that beer, I told them the full story of how that day came to be. 

Kayaking Barcelona


The story went like this.  For 2 years now I had been trying to escape being an engineer that just sits behind a computer all day and makes 3D computer models.  I am basically a trained monkey.  When you have no challenges at work there is little motivation to work.  In 7 years I NEVER even talked to anyone...I couldn’t even tell you one phone number I ever had at work.  They were all saying “Haha, what?!”  I had started part time grad school a year before trying to become a project manager or sales person, someone that TALKS to people on a daily basis.  Luckily, or unluckily, I got hired as a project manager at a company in a great industry making more money than I could ever imagine!  I thought it was my dream...turns out not.  

Bastille Day in Paris, 200,000 people danced to YMCA!


My dreams were shattered because the only person who could train me, an engineer I met in my interview...he quit the Friday before I started on Monday...and the electrical engineer followed.  This was due to managerial changes that happened before I even started.  Nobody told me that 25% of the staff had just quit...so the first day, the first thing my boss says to me is

"SORRY"..."sorry there is no one to train you in a field you haven't worked in"...My heart sunk!!!  

Selfie near the bottom of the Grand Canyon in Arizona


And from that day on, my every day was like a terrible scavenger hunt to do work, finding files I have no idea what they are named.  Imagine looking for a "widget" and someone called it a "whatzit" and you have to find a needle in a haystack every day.  I won’t say I felt like dying…that would mean I felt something, anything at all, but I didn’t.  My mind went numb for 7 months.  Every day I went in and felt nothing except wanting to bang my head on desk.  This was supposed to be the best job of my life.  I felt like somebody lied to me!

I had to explain this to my international friends over a beer and they were shocked as well because I never complained about it.  I never complained because I thought everyone hated their jobs, not just me.  These particular friends of mine were doing cancer research at a local children's hospital and they think very differently than us Midwestern folk.  

The first thing they asked is "why the hell are you still in Cincinnati!?"  

I was a crawfish boil virgin hahaha!  Got my second tattoo here to mark the occassion.


To be honest with you, growing up without money in the Midwest, I was inexperienced with travel. In my mind, traveling to another country is for couples on their honeymoon to do once in their life if they are lucky.   I was single, at 30 years old in Ohio and did not own a home.  If you are not married in Ohio at 30 years old, even if you have a solid career, you failed at life!  I hate to admit, but that has caused some of my depression over the years.  I mean come on, I was a misfit in Ohio and Wisconsin and anywhere I went except Chicago, but that's another story.  

My friends taught me that due to their proximity to each other in Europe, seeing other countries was normal.  Enrico asked “Why don’t you take a vacation somewhere amazing and get out of this terrible place, man!?” 

And I said what I'd said my entire life, “I can't afford it and I don't have anyone to go with.” 

Enrico explained that we have this tendency to want to pair up, with either a significant other or best friend, and never do anything alone, especially introverted engineers like me.  Due to the pairing up aspect of my life, I have been saving money to get married one day and buy a house, so relieve my anxiety, I needed to keep a big down payment in my bank account…like I would magically get married and buy a house overnight or something.  Hahaha! 

So, my friend Enrico broke it down like this, "You don't have a job, you have tons of money saved as an engineer at this last job, you don't have a mortgage, school is out for the summer, you don't have a long term girlfriend, or even a cat? What the hell are you still doing here?! You could die of cancer tomorrow and what will that mountain of riches do in your grave? GO LIVE MAN!!!”   

Real Naples, Italy pizza.  


For personally reason, this broke my heart!  I don’t know why this, out of everything in my life so made me feel like I’ve been living a lie.  Maybe it’s just the enthusiasm Italians speak with, but something in my head snapped.

Right now, I have to admit that I did have a blank passport for 2 years from a previous job.  After some more discussion, and another beer, I went home to my area which had bars and clubs, had several more depressed drinks.  

I kept thinking “why the hell is this so hard to do?!” 

The best sunset of my life taking a ferry off Southern Italy


After hours of contemplation, that night I ended up with a non-refundable 6 week ticket in and out to Napoli, Italia (Naples, Italy) for 3 days later.  Let me repeat, 3 days later and I spent 2000$ since it was double the cost.  When I woke up that Saturday morning, after letting the fear sink in, and there was a LOT of fear, I sent Enrico a text,

"I did a bad thing man!"  

"What?"  He replied.

"I bought a ticket to Italy...in 3 days for 42 nights!"



He came back with "you, my friend, are the craziest American I know!!! Come over Sunday, we gotta make plans!!!"  

Let me point out here, I'd never been abroad, did have a passport, and since I grew up poor, I never in my life had hopes of going to another country.  You just don't do that sort of thing alone.  I did not even have a back pack (I got a solid backpackers bag now).  I also did not have anything but a 42 night ticket in and out of Naples, no hotel, no car, and horror movies on cable TV have given me a debilitating fear of being murdered and dismantled in hostels in Europe!  OUCH!!!  I did not know how public transportation worked or how big Italy was.  I was completely ignorant of the rest of the world.  

Enrico had me buy a travel guide, the "Lonely Planet" travel guide for Italy; he said that was going to be my "Bible".  And it was!  Today, I have a guide for Italy, Western Europe and now the US.  He invited me over and our German friend Toby and his awesome girlfriend Valeria. We went over what I was to do in their hometown of Naples giving me 1 week of plans.  He even set me up with 2 nights in a bed and breakfast and let me use his Italian cell phone on my 6 weeks abroad.  Even having never been abroad, I already had contacts of both of their friends on Facebook and in the phone.  I cannot tell you how much these 2 have changed my life!  Those stories in Naples I could write a book on.  I could also write a book just on the things I screwed up as a newbie traveler.  The only thing I was certain of was that I had a ticket Italy and 2 friends in Paris I met in Cincinnati, Ohio.  42 days in Europe with no plans, and basically unlimited fundage…yup every day I made once in a life time memories!

Giving new friends from around the world a tour of Naples...yup did that!


 After my awesome Ohio friend Deanna dropped me off at the airport at the butt crack of dawn, I boarded the plane alone, and I felt chills down my spine! A layover in NYC and 3 flights later, I had been dropped off in the most beautiful weather I had ever seen in Naples!  The second I stepped off the plane I knew something in my mind snapped or cracked or something.  I was broken…to my old life. 

I was doing something no one I grew up with will ever understand.  My friend got me a bed and breakfast in the historic center of Naples, a very high energy, non-touristy area.  The exhilarating energy was everywhere in the fresh Mediterranean air.  Everywhere, people speaking in tongues I could not understand.  The cab ride to the well hidden BnB was my first hassle with an Italian speaking driver.  It was in what looked like a dark and scary alley you would not go down in the US.  Everything in that area, because it older than our country, looks old and scary and uniquely picturesque! 

Roma!


After reading my “Lonely Planet” Italy guide, I found that it taught me maps, history of the city, speaking some words, hotels, hostels, and ways to get around the city.  It was a life saver many times over!  The first 2 nights I stayed in an EMPTY BnB by myself, and stayed up all night because JETLAG SUCKS!  I had no idea about hostels yet until I randomly ran into 2 French Canadians girls getting yelled at by a guard trying to buy ticket in French but he only spoke Italian.  Luckily, all my French friends speaking in front of me taught me how to catch their language. 

Those girls and I ended up hanging out in this Castle in Naples and then they took me to their hostel after I mentioned I was staying alone.  This changed my life on so many levels.  We walked into what was rated the best hostel in Naples…it wasn’t dark or dreary and scary, but lit up with young, friendly international people sitting on bean bag chairs watching movies and drinking beer!  After that day I brought my stuff with me and spent the rest of my time until Paris in hostels making once in a life time stories with once in a lifetime friends. 



Over the next 6 weeks I wandered aimlessly through 12 cities in 5 countries on my solo trip.  I met people who had similar stories or even better ones and listened in awe of how international people live.  The funny thing is everywhere I went, everyone asked if I was from New York or California, a state I’d never been to, based on my personality. I went to Naples, Rome, Florence, Sienna, Venice, Salzburg, Munich, Genoa (Cinque Terre national park where I almost died cliff diving), Nice, Barcelona (my favorite city), Pamplona ( Running of the Bulls festival), and Paris, where my awesome friend’s family let me stay in a spare room for a week and were amazing at educating me on France.  The countries were Italy, Austria, Germany, France and Spain, with a layover in London twice. 

The most important lesson I learned is how friendly travelers can be to each other, because they know what it’s like to feel absolutely alone and stranded.  While I was in a hostel in Florence, Italy, I was introduced to www.Couchsurfing.org by an Aussie chick.  I joined CS then and there after hearing about it.  The problem is you don’t have much Wi-Fi in Europe so I never used it in Europe.  When I got home in mid-July to Ohio I was already planning escape, but I needed a job to save up money, and I didn’t know where to move?  Basically, I was just throwing a random dart at a dart board at this point. 

I got a job doing aerospace engineering and I forgot about Couchsurfing until August or September, when I got my first request from a young guy from Los Angeles, CA.  The reason I hosted this dude was doing a cross country trip by himself…10 years younger than me, and outdoing me!  I took this as a personal challenge.  He taught me how nice all the people were, but at the end of the day, everyone in the Midwest is the same.  I learned how worldly and traveled the people in California and other coastal cities are.  Based on staying friends with John and another friend who escaped Cincinnati to San Fran, I planned a trip to CA to Couchsurf for my first time. 

During Christmas,  I took my 2 weeks of vacation time and decided to check out CA.  I spent 12 days Couchsurfing in San Fran, Los Angeles to see my first Couchsurfer but stayed with another, San Diego a house away from the beach, and Tijuana, Mexico for my birthday, New Year’s Eve.  The best part of staying on someone’s couch is that you get to know the locals, the hangouts, not just the touristy areas your corporate hotel has been PAID to tell you to visit.  You learn a lot about what’s wrong with corporate America when you travel abroad to hostels and the garbage we get sold here.  I decided that while I loved SF, it rained every day I was there but one, LA is too much fakeness and dirty water on the beaches, and I never even imagined going to San Diego, but a friend I met in a hostel in Europe lived here so I checked it out. 

I stayed on the beach, in December when my hometown is -30 degrees…a 100 degree temperature difference!  It was paradise!!!




I went home, dropped out of grad school, got overtime at my work, worked 7 days a week for months and saved up.  I sold all my worldly belongings except what fit in my car and what planned on being a single city to check out on my way to CA, turned into me seeing 14 places and hitting my 37th state.  I went from my hometown in Wisconsin, where there was 4 inches of ice in April, all the way down to Key West most southern point, and from the Atlantic Ocean on the East coast to the Pacific here in CA.  It was an eye opening experience to be let into others homes and have dinner or be shown around their favorite spots.  I did have to sleep in my car 5 nights, but it was pretty nice weather in May.  My favorite spots are driving across the Florida Keys to Key West and New Orleans for its amazing energy and culture you don’t see anywhere else!  J

My 6000 mile couchsurfing trip on my way San Diego.


Never will I tell you this move to San Diego has been an easy transition, since I still don’t have an mechanical engineering job, but after many struggles this last year and having to figure out where I want my career to be, I’m still happier than I’ve ever been!  Everybody here is happier than they’ve ever been back home!  I am in San Diego now and have hosted many people on Couchsurfing from around the world.  Living 3 blocks from the beach has it’s perks, since I take bikes rides on the boardwalk. I live 2 blocks from the most beautiful beach in the country.  I want to go live in Europe in the next few years after my time in SD.  I’ve got 2 years and my new graduate program is up and I’ll take it from there.  I’m no longer afraid to do things alone, because of that “beer that changed my life.”  I recommend you go out and try something you are afraid of today.  Don’t wait because you will never do it!  J


Installing solar panels in San Diego with Grid Alternatives

A couchsurfer from Taiwan I hosted 2 nights.  Home ;)

365 days of great weather.




Friday, March 14, 2014

Buy that ticket and try something you are afraid of...or how I found out about Couchsuring.

Hi,

I am a typical Midwestern 32 year old guy who basically packed up my entire life last year living in Cincinnati, Ohio and escaped to join the rebellion to San Diego, CA but I couchsurfed an entire month on the way, 6 total now. I host and have been hosted many times, as well as AIRBNB.   I'm from Milwaukee, WI and lived in Madison where I went to school for 7 years, my favorite city still.  I ended up in Ohio for 5 years and worked a typical boring "Office Space" engineering job for many years.  After becoming jaded with the corporate system over the years, I ended up leaving a 7 month position, very unhappy and unhappy with with life overall in the Midwest.  I found that my open mindedness  and health conscious decisions made it hard to make friends in Ohio, except international people because they have just as hard or harder time befriending Midwesterners.  They were very welcoming because they had no friends and had more open minded views. I grew up an overweight kid in poverty in Wisconsin and I had lost 70 pounds back in Madison and now had just quit the highest paying job of my life.  I never told anyone and a week later after being jaded looking at new jobs that all sounded equally "Office Space", I was invited out for a "beer that changed my life".  My international friends and I joke about it now.  I didn't want to go out on that Friday night, but I had 4 friends out that said just come out for one.  I joined them at a bar that had the biggest craft selection in town and as I enter I have an Italian couple on my right side, and to my left a German friend and his Indian girlfriend.  I had hung out with these guys a lot, but this time was different.  They asked what I was doing and I said looking for jobs.  They were shocked and asked "why?"  I told them the story, which was that I had been trying to escape being an engineer that just sits behind a computer all day and makes CAD models and NEVER in 7 years got to talk to anyone...boring!  I had started part time grad school a year before trying to become a project manager or sales person, someone that TALKS to people on a daily basis.  Luckily, or unluckily, I got hired as a project manager at a company in the plastics industry designing huge machines, making more money than I could ever imagine!  I thought it was my  dream...turns out not.  It was in an industry that was growing fast and I had never done that type of work and they offered to train me for 6 months in the interview.   I was hired into a group of 8 people, with 1 mechanical and 1 electrical engineer who had 20 years of experience at the company, and I was supposed to get trained by the ME.  The problem was, the ME I met in my interview...he quit the Friday before I started on Monday...and the electrical engineer followed.  This was due to managerial changes that happened before I even started.  Nobody told me that 25% of the staff had just quit...so the first day, the first thing my boss says to me is "sorry"..."sorry there is no one to train you in a field you haven't worked in"...and from that day on, my every day was like a terrible scavenger hunt to do work, finding files I have no idea what they are named.  Imagine looking for a "widget" and someone called it a "whatzit" and you have to find a needle in a haystack every day.  After several months I had become so jaded that the highest paying job of my life was this!  

I had to explain this to my international friends over a beer and they were shocked as well because I never complained about it.  Now, these friends of mine I was having beer with were doing cancer research at a the local children's hospital and they think very differently than us Midwestern folk.  The first thing they asked is "why the hell I was still in Cincinnati!?"  I am a typical Midwestern guy, and I grew up without money, and so I have never gone abroad.  Typically the only time we go abroad is study abroad or on our honeymoons, and I was single,  at 30 years old in Ohio.  Most people get married and start making babies and move to the suburban life around 22 to 25 years old.  I was a misfit in Ohio and Wisconsin and anywhere I went except Chicago, but that's another story.  Since people travel to other countries more in Europe, they asked why I didn't take a vacation somewhere amazing.  And I said what I'd said my entire life, I can't afford it and I don't have anyone to go with.  We have this tendency to want to pair up and never do anything alone, especially introverts like me.  So, my friend Enrico came back saying broke it down like this, "you don't have a job, you have tons of money saved as an engineer at this last job, you don't have a mortgage, school is out for the summer, you don't have a long term girlfriend, or even a cat? What the hell are you still doing here?! You could die of cancer tomorrow.  Go live man!!!”   

I have to admit here that I did have a passport I never used from a previous job, and after going home to my area which had bars and clubs, had several more depressed drinks.  That night I ended up with a non-refundable 6 week ticket in and out to Napoli, Italia (Naples, Italy) for 3 days later.  Let me repeat, 3 days later and I spent 2000$ since it was double the cost.  When I woke up that Saturday morning, after letting the fear sink in, and there was a LOT of fear,  I sent my friend Enrico a text, "I did a bad thing man!"  "What"  "I bought a ticket to Italy...in 3 days for 42 nights!" He came back with "you, my friend, are the craziest American I know!!! Come over Sunday, we gotta make plans."  Let me point out here, I'd never been abroad, did have a passport, and since I grew up poor I never in my life had hopes of going to another country.  You just don't do that sort of thing alone.  I did not even have a back pack...I got a solid backpackers bag now.  I also did not have anything but a 42 night ticket in and out of Naples.  No hotel, no car, and horror movies have given me a major fear of hostels.  I did not know how public transportation worked or how big Italy was.  I was completely ignorant of the rest of the world.  

Enrico had me buy a travel guide, the "Lonely Planet" travel guide for Italy; he said that was going to be my "Bible".  And it was!  I have a guide for Italy, Western Europe and now the US.  I went to his house and he and his awesome girlfriend Valeria went over what I was to do in their hometown giving me 1 week of plans.  He even set me up with 2 nights in a bed and breakfast and let me use his Italian cell phone on my 6 weeks abroad.  I already had contacts of both of their friends on Facebook and in the phone.  I cannot tell you how much these 2 have changed my life!  Those stories in Naples I could write a book on.  I could also write a book just on the things I screwed up as a newbie traveler.  The only thing I was certain of was that I had a ticket Italy and 2 friends in Paris I met in Cincinnati, Ohio.  42 days in Europe with no plans, and basically unlimited fundage on my credit cards, yup every day I made once in a life time memories.  

 After my awesome friend Deanna dropped me off at the airport at the butt crack of dawn, I boarded the plane alone.  3 flights later I had been dropped off in the most beautiful weather I had ever seen in Naples, and the second I stepped off the plane I knew something in my mind snapped or cracked or something.  I was broken…to my old life.  I was doing something no one could ever understand.  My friend got me a BnB in the historic center of Naples, very non-touristy area.  The energy was the first thing I noticed and the fresh air.  The crazy amounts of people speaking in tongues I could not understand.  I did the stuff on my list and had read a great deal of my “Lonely Planet” Italy guide that taught me maps, history of the city, speaking some words, hotels, hostels, and ways to get around the city.  It was an amazing help!  The first 2 nights I stayed in an empty BnB and had no idea about hostels yet, until I randomly ran into 2 French Canadians girls getting yelled at by a guard trying to buy ticket in French but he spoke Italian.  Luckily, all my French friends speaking in front of me taught me how to catch their language.  Those girls and I ended up hanging out in this Castle in Naples and then they took me to their hostel after I mentioned I was staying alone.  This changed my life on so many levels.  We walked into what was rated the best hostel in Naples…it wasn’t dark or dreary and scary, but lit up with young, friendly international people sitting on bean bag chairs watching movies and drinking beer!  After that day I brought my stuff with me and spent the rest of my time until Paris in hostels making once in a life time stories. 

I ended up in 12 cities in 5 countries on my solo trip.  I met people who had similar stories or even better ones and listened in awe of how international people live.  The funny thing is everywhere I went, everyone asked if I was from New York or California, a state I’d never been to, based on my personality. I went to Naples, Rome, Florence, Sienna, Venice, Salzburg, Munich, Genoa (Cinque Terre national park where I almost died cliff diving), Nice, Barcelona (my favorite city), Pamplona ( Running of the Bulls festival), and Paris, where my awesome friend’s family let me stay in a spare room for a week and were amazing at educating me on France.  The countries were Italy, Austria, Germany, France and Spain, with a layover in London twice. 

The most important lesson I learned is how different and friendly travelers can be to each other.  While I was in a hostel in Florence, Italy, I was introduced to Couchsurfing by an Aussie girl.  I joined then and there after hearing about it.  The problem is you don’t have much Wi-Fi in Europe so I never used it in Europe.  When I got home in mid-July to Cincinnati, Ohio I was already planning on leaving the city, but I needed a job to save up money, and I didn’t know where to move?  I got a job doing aerospace engineering and I forgot about Couchsurfing until August or September, when I got my first request from a young guy from Los Angeles, CA.  The reason I hosted this dude was doing a cross country trip by himself…10 years younger than me, and outdoing me.  He taught me how nice all the people were, but at the end of the day, everyone in the Midwest is the same.  I learned how worldly and traveled the people in California were.  Based on staying friends with John and another friend who escaped Cincinnati to San Fran, I planned a trip to CA to Couchsurf for my first time. 

I took my 2 weeks of vacation time during Christmas and decided to check out CA.  I spent 12 days Couchsurfing in San Fran, Los Angeles to see my first Couchsurfer but stayed with another, San Diego a house away from the beach, and Tijuana, Mexico for my birthday, New Year’s Eve.  The best part of staying on someone’s couch is that you get to know the locals, the hangouts, not just the touristy areas your corporate hotel has been paid to tell you.  I decided that while I loved SF, it rained every day I was there but one, LA is too much fakeness and too dirty water on the beaches, and I never even imagined going to San Diego, but a friend I met in a hostel in Europe lived here so I checked it out.  I stayed on the beach, in December when my hometown is -30 degrees!  It was paradise! 

I went home, dropped out of grad school, got overtime at my work, worked 7 days a week for months and saved up.  I sold all my worldly belongs except what fit in my car and what planned on being a single city to check out on my way to CA, turned into me seeing 14 places and hitting my 37th state.  I went from my hometown in Wisconsin all the way down to Key West most southern point, and from the Atlantic Ocean on the East coast to the Pacific here in CA.  It was an eye opening experience to be let into others homes and have dinner or be shown around their favorite spots.  I did have to sleep in my car 5 nights, but it was pretty nice weather in May.  My favorite spots are driving across the Florida Keys to Key West and New Orleans for its amazing energy and culture you don’t see anywhere else. 

I am in San Diego now and have hosted many people on Couchsurfing and Airbnb now.  I live 2 blocks from the most beautiful beach in the country.  I want to go live in Europe in the next few years after my time in SD.  I’ve got 2 years and my new graduate program is up and I’ll take it from there.  I’m no longer afraid to do things alone, because of that “beer that changed my life.”  I recommend you go out and try something you are afraid of today.  Don’t wait because you will never do it! 







Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Roma / Rome - Day 1 - Part 6 - Europe Trip

“No matter how careful you are, there's going to be the sense you missed something, the collapsed feeling under your skin that you didn't experience it all. There's that fallen heart feeling that you rushed right through the moments where you should've been paying attention.  Well, get used to that feeling. That's how your whole life will feel some day.  This is all practice.” 
― Chuck PalahniukInvisible Monsters

Ok.  I should apologize for not getting back to this sooner.  I know it's been a month and a half, but more life changing experiences happen almost every week in my life lately.  After my trip to Cali I know where I want to live, San Diego.  I backbacked through all the best cities for free crashing on couches I found on couchsurfing.org.  If I were to tell you to do one thing right now, it's sign up for that website, it'll expand your world in ways you never thought possible!  :)  I went to San Francisco, San Diego, Los Angeles, and Tijuana, MX for free for 12 days, and you can too.

Other happenings in my life include not being able to find a new roommate, which is going to cost me a lot of money in rent.  I didn't want to give up my place in MT Adams, but the universe has bigger things for me, so I'll be putting my notice in on my apartment, and move out by March.  As luck would have it, I have a friend closing on a house offering me dirt cheap rent for the duration of my stay in Cincy...funny how these things work themselves out when you worry so much and enjoy the ride.  So, the last thing I need to do is find a job.  I've built my resume up more than any person I've met over the past 7 years, so this won't be an issue.  San Diego beaches here I fucking come!!!   Also, if you've ever wanted to make a big change in your life but have been too hesitant or afraid of being alone, I want you to read this post by my friend, a Cincy native who  made her first scary trip out of a 10 year marriage and the best job in the country to find happiness, and found more than I could've hoped for her in Hawaii of all places this year.  http://chroniclesofriddikulus.blogspot.com

The Colosseum


Onto Roma, Italia day 1!!!  Now that I got my rant about my American ignorance of the public transport system abroad, let's go onto the city.  I stayed at the hostel The Yellow which, as all good hostels do, supply you with a map of all the big toursity shit to go see.  This is a life saver I found out later in my trip since you are in Europe, with no GPS and not everyone speaks English...ok, that's only part true.  Did you know that Rome was founded by the legendary twins Romulus and Remus in 753BC?  Turns out the story goes they were sentenced to death as babies, were saved by a she wolf, and years later they made their own 2 cities founded on where they thought they were born.  This pissed the other brother off so much he killed his Remus.  The city needed women, so they invited everyone from the surrounding country, at which the men of the city abducted all the women in what is known as the Rape of the Sabine Women...yup, the more you know.  Hahaha!  What?  

Old ruins from the Colosseum. 


The Colosseum was just amazing!  It is just a marvel of human creation!  When you walk in, it feels like a football stadium, but it's all made out of stone.  I've been to the Packers Stadium and the Bengals, and you don't get THIS feeling where your jaw drops.  This is a 2000 year old structure that held some of the most violent events of history.  This is a  place that held gladiators fighting to the death against criminals and wildlife.  At one point, it could hold up to 50,000 people. The Colosseum was used to kill 9000 gladiators and 10,000 animals in a 117 day killing spree.  There are even paths underground so that this could be made into a navel warfare event.  Awesome!  

Part of the Roman Forum, or kind of like a market, religious area, etc.

Look what I found on Palatino hill!  So random
America!  Fuck ya!!!  ;-)
Everything in Rome is gigantic, and historic, and breath taking.  It also turns out that Rome, is the most American city I've ever seen in Europe.  They speak better English there than in England, so you know it's a huge tourst area for Americans, Australians, Canadians, and well, the rest of the fucking world.  Hahaha!  When you see all of the signs in English, and the waiters don't have Italian accents at all, you know it's not an authentic Italian city anymore.  

Oh, and there was a dance club in the hostel's basement
where I met some of the coolest friends in the world!






Monday, December 10, 2012

Roma / Rome - Colosseum - Part 5 - Europe Trip


Colosseum is fucking massive!

The original plans for the Colosseum.  


So on today's episode, I let you know how ignorant I am as an American traveler.  On June 11th, I traveled from Naples, Italy to Rome or Roma via the metro.  Now, seeing as I have absolutely no experience with trains because we just don't use them here much, I had no idea what to expect.  I mean, NO IDEA, like even how to buy a ticket and if my credit card would work.  Turns out my credit card does NOT work at most train stations which led to many not so funny stories.  It also turns out I brought the WRONG check card with all of my cash in my bank account so I had to transfer funds from one bank to another.  Then, it took 1 week to transfer those funds, so when I did I thought I had enough for my trip.  To top it off, my check card also didn't want to work at some of the ATM's.  This led to another funny story of why I didn't make it to Amsterdam's red light district!  Fuck my life right?

Random Californian I met.  
It's tall too. 

Huge marble gladiators.  



I think the one thing that saved my life is that I had friends from Naples already before I went there.  That's why I booked my ticket to Naples, Italy, because I had someone to tell me about the area.  Once I was there, I had 6 weeks to travel, random number I know, but I had a few drinks when I booked.  He had me buy the Lonely Planet  guide on Italy.  If you ever travel BUY A TRAVEL GUIDE, or you may end up stranded or dead or raped I don't know, just buy one of these.  http://www.lonelyplanet.com/italy  My travel from Napoli to Roma cost me a total of 22 Euro and took 2 hours.  I would have thought that this would cost a lot more.  This is dirt cheap in my mind, to get from one major city to another is cheap in Europe and so easy!  On my trip I had time to wind down and go through my guide to write down what to do for the 4 days I would be in Rome.  I had my hostel in Naples, Hostel of the Sun, book me a hostel in Rome called the Yellow.  Apparently, this place is known through out the world as a huge party place with a hundred people staying every night.

It's like a giant football field, but 2000 years old.  

Everything in Rome is giant sized!

The Yellow is a half mile walk from the Roma Termini train station but it was a beautiful sunny day with 80+ degree weather.  That's the best part of Italy, there are no clouds.  When I had my transfer in London from Heathrow to Gatwick airports, it was COLD as shit and cloudy both times I went through.  Italy is sunny and cloudless, not too windy, and not humid.  I mean, I was sweating my ass off with my gigantic backpack but once I got it off, it was very nice weather.  Rome is inland, whereas Naples was on the Mediterranean sea.

Next time I'll post pictures about the Colosseum, Roman Forum, Palatino, and other awesome things.

Friday, November 23, 2012

Pompeii and Naples - Part 4 - Europe Trip

The audio guide for the city of Pompeii exhibit


This is going to be a short post because the only thing I have left is my day in Pompeii.  Naples is next, sort of, Mt Vesuvius (Vesuvioso I think in Italian) and you are always reminded of the raw power of nature here. Everyday you are looking at a volcano that could kill you whenever it wants.  You live life with more respect for nature when you realize you can die at any time.  The most amazing part is just how eerily quiet Pompeii is when you are alone.  So I went out and made 2 new friends for the day by themselves and who actually told me that I made their time awesome.

The central temple/market from 2000 years ago.
Pompeii was a thriving city 2000 years ago and then one day, boom!  Dead!  And your lasting legacy is being an art exhibit...  Can you imagine what the people who we have body castings would think if they knew they are our exhibits?  We stare and point all day long!

One of the people buried who's body left an empty hole.
They are covering their face from the ashes and heat.

Another body found that showed the person covering their eyes.
It makes you feel their pain to see this in person.
It really changes your whole perspective on things.

The Opera theatre with a tour group going through.

One of my new single serving friends I met in Pompeii

The colosseum was gigantic and 2000 years old. 

One of my new single serving friends I met in Pompeii.
One lives in Australia, the other London.

Pompeii is an actual city.  
Naples has hard times too.
Don't think that just because I showed you all beautiful pictures all the time that that's it.  Naples was the dirtiest city I've ever seen in some parts, but it has so much character too.  Every city has poverty, get over it and appreciate it for the good parts because you can't have the good without the bad.  Below you'll see that by this point I had picked up 4 people to travel with in Europe.  The 2 new ones were on their honeymoon in Amalfi Coast, Naples area, and were lost trying to get to Da Michele, but you can't find shit too easily there. So I helped them out and asked if they wanted to go with me and my 2 new friends from Pompeii.  They had a blast and said that I made their honeymoon awesome because for 2 days they had shit luck!  Confidence extremely boosted at this point.  Hahaha!

She's got this!  E Decumani restaurant again, 5 Euro only!
This is the look of ferocious optimism of finishing that pizza alone!  

5 Euro pizzas are huge and fresh and fucking amazing!
I saved my new Canadian friends on their honeymoon.

The look horror as the owner makes her finish her plate,
but she can't!

Naples is old and with old buildings,
you can't just power was them like in America.