Thursday, December 14, 2006

Long time no blog

Last blog was from Plovdiv, where I spent a wonderful day, met some new people, met up with friends from Istanbul, and made friends on the bus ride home. In a nutshell, Plovdiv is a beautiful little town and I'm definitely going back there for another visit.
 
Speaking of visits, my next trip is going t obe to Barbados to visit the parents. I am planning to leave here on or about January 19 or so. Unfortunately though, my wallet was stolen last week so I have to figure out some solution to the problem of being without a drivers' licence. We'll see what happens. Hopefully, some morally upright Turk will find it and turn it in to the police..... Inshallah!
 
As far as my life lately, I still go to salsa classes on a weekly basis. My partner is Cameron, another teacher. He's an Australian yoga teacher whose job before coming here was teaching English to some monks in Tibet or India or something.... He's definitely a character, and he's fun to dance with.
 
The cats are doing well although with winter coming, Baris's lungs are sounding wheezy again. Apparently his lungs are too small for his body. Not surprising since his body is huge! Savas takes good care of him though.
 
I have another friend here Cengiz, who I met at a Language Exchange website. I get to practice my Turkish and he his English so it's a good deal for both of us. We've been getting together about once or twice a week to chat.
 
All in all life is very much the same. I still have a private lesson with a Baha'i in our community once a week. In fact, we have a class now.
 
Anyone reading this, drop me a note to let me know what's going on. I'm tired of opening my inbox and finding it full of only junk mail. My email address is my first name at gmail dot com.....
 
See ya!
 
 

Thursday, October 26, 2006

In Plovdiv

Random trips.... Get on a bus. Go to a place. Explore. Go home. That's what I like. I arrived in Plovdiv, Bulgaria at 4 this morning. Lucky for me, the taxi driver I got knew of a 24-hour Internet cafe. I'm still here, although I'm not sure how I will pay, I have Euros and not the local currency, which, since I don't know what it is, I will call "bullies". The Bulgarian alphabet is the cyrillic script, like Russian, so I have no idea what it says when I see prices written. When Scott, another teacher, first came to Turkey, he didn't know the currency's name. It was written YTL (for Yeni Turk Lirasi - New TUrkish Lira) so he called them "yertles", and still does. So it is with the BUlgarian bullies for me. My taxi here cost 3 bullies. The Internet cafe will probably come to about 5 bullies. Hopefully, if I give him 5 euros, I will get bullies for change. The exchange rate is about 2 bullies to 1 euro...
 
Plovdiv. Everything about it sounds dowdy and Russian. It looks like how I imagined Russia to look back in the days of the cold war when the word "Russia" was a bad word. Looking outside, it is kinda like looking at a t.v. show from like 20 years ago. There's colour, but it's not very vivid. It feels like whole chunks of the spectrum are missing, and got taken over by shades of grey and brown. It's weird because in such a setting I would expect to find kinda greyish people walking around hunched over and standing in line for food or coal... Instead all I've seen so far are the teenage boys up all night gaming on the internet, and they are just as vivid as teenagers anywhere.
 
I'm going to go out now and take pictures of Plovdiv. See what it looks like as it wakes up. Then I'm having lunch with Georgina and Rachael. We may even meet up with Sean and Kelly as well... We'll see.
 
Off to Plovdiv!

Friday, September 15, 2006

I got the music back...


I got the music back...
I got the music back...
I got the music back...
Originally uploaded by Krisia.

I've been in Turkey for a year and a half now and there's been something missing the whole time. I've made several attempts to find and connect with musicians, because the thing I really missed was sitting down with friends and making music together. None of these attempts had really panned out into anything. Last week in conversation class I met a guitarist, Levent. His brother Freddie plays the ney, a Turkish bamboo flute. He arrived in Istanbul last Sunday. We have been playing almost daily since then. I can't believe how much I have missed this. My fingers are calloused, my throat is sore, but I'm extremely happy! :o)

Thursday, August 24, 2006

No News is....

...no news. The thing about blogging is that it's really easy to think of excuses not to when you're not in the mood to blog. My latest excuse is that the air conditioner in the teachers' room at work is not working, and hasn't been working all summer. Because I don't have internet at home, this means that my e-mail gets neglected. That includes my blog.
 
The last couple of weeks have been dominated by Ertu and I's "break-up" which is in quotation marks since we were never technically "together" but we were together enough for us to "break-up" and it's taken a while to get over it. We learned a lot from each other and love each other dearly, but sometimes that's not enough, and life goes on.
 
Istanbul is sweltering hot right now. We've been going through cycles of hot and extremely hot, with little respite. With the aforementioned airconditioner in the teachers' room out of service, this means that I spend less time planning classes, and more time at the gym, where it's nice and cool. I can't wait till september.
 
My flatmate is going away on Sunday. She's visiting her family for the month of September. I will have the flat to myself. The cats will probably be neurotic at first (apparently Savas missed me a lot when I was gone, and that made Baris act crazy). Rebecca is Baris's favourite so I'll probably be stuck with  7 kilos (that's 15 lbs) of neurotic cat, and Savas (another 6 kilos) will be crazy from Baris's weird mood. Other than that, it'll be nice to have the place to myself for a change. Won't have to close the balcony door every hour when she goes to smoke.... If nothing else it'll be cooler. :o)

Sunday, July 30, 2006

On Doing Nothing...

Well, I'm back home in Istanbul after a wonderful, meditative vacation in France and Spain. I got to see friends I hadn't seen in too long, visit places I've wanted to see for a long time, and, most importantly, relax. I stopped everything, and spent quite a few days doing absolutely nothing, and loving it. There's something about seeing a person doing nothing that really bothers people. I think we tolerate it for a few minutes, but when it moves into hours or days, we get worried and nervous.
 
My life is busy. I go to work in the morning, spend the afternoon with friends, or sightseeing, or just walking around, and of course, going to the gym. In the evening I work again. My days off aren't really days off because I have private students. OK so my work isn't a constant, 9-5 kinda thing, and I do have a lot of free time, but very rarely am I just doing nothing.
 
Before I left for this trip, my friend Erturul gave me a book on meditation to read. One of the things that it made me realise was that I wasn't giving myself time and space to think, and listen to myself. By filling my days up from waking to bedtime, I didn't have time to sit and just be.
 
I let myself do that this holiday. And it was great. I learned so much about myself. It's funny how when I was at home and had nothing to do, before, I would be bored, and go and do something. Now I actually make time for not having anything to do and spend it meditating. It's so refreshing and has changed my outlook on life. The only problem is, when people see that you have nothing to do and are doing nothing, they get worried. It's a big obstacle to get over. Now when I see people doing nothing, I don't ask them if their bored, or try to fill up their time for them. I leave them be, and hope they enjoy it.

Thursday, July 20, 2006

...and another


...and another
Originally uploaded by Krisia.
I can't just do my parents' ... here's mine. Liss, yours is coming.

What's good for the goose...


What's good for the goose...
Originally uploaded by Krisia.
... :o)

Forgive me mother...


Forgive me mother...
Originally uploaded by Krisia.
but I couldn't resist!!!

There's a great site where you can make your own South Park characters and my mom is so animated, it was only a matter of time....

Wednesday, July 19, 2006

Blogroll please...

So here it is, the results of hours of work, now it should (crossed fingers) be easier to keep track of what's blogging. Here is a comprehensive blogroll of my friends, acquaintances, and people that maybe I wish I could be friends with. If you're on this list and don't want to be, or not on this list and want to be, let me know! (It's on the right, under the archives... you might have to scroll down a bit...)
 
 

Feed me!!! - (literarily)

No that's not a type-o. I need to be feed literarily, as in with words... I don't know if that's a real word, but I like how it feels in my mouth.
 
I spent the good part of a morning (albeit another scorching Zaragoza summer morning, in which staying inside in a cool dark house is preferable to anything else) blogsurfing. This involved clicking on the links of all the blogs that I have in my google favourites, and reading all the new entries one by one. Of course, as I visited blogs, I found links to blogs of other people I know, and added them to my links, and the cycle continued. Before I knew it, hours had passed, my links list became long enough to have to scroll through, and my head was full of news of relocations, marriages, new babies, travelling tales, new software (some of the people I know are quite computer-geeky), and various other bloggable bits of info. By lunch time (and in Spain that's somewhere close to 3 p.m.) my head was ready to explode, but I felt happy and caught up. There were so many people I met in Haifa during my service there that I wish I had had a chance to know better. Somehow, by reading their blogs, I feel like they have become a part of my life, or rather their lives have become a part of mine. It's not the same as getting to know them better, but it's better than not.
 
So during this foray into blogland, I got to thinking how cool it would be if this whole process wasn't manual. Clicking links, reading new stuff, if any, reading old stuff and realising that I had already read it, finding comments etc... Very time consuming, and tedious, and if I weren't on vacation in Zaragoza, I probably wouldn't have the time, energy or inclination to bother. As with all my other ideas, I knew that if I though it could be automated, someone must have already done it. So I googled it, and found that with a simple free subscription to bloglines, I could add everyone's blog with a single click for each, and then when I wanted, it would show me updates on the stuff I hadn't read yet. How cool! Now all the blogs are in one place, instead of clicking 20 jillion links and scrolling around the archives to read new stuff, I can see what's been added since last time. I also added my flickr contacts and dude, my life just got really easy.
 
I know there are those of you out there saying "duh. I've been doing this for years", but the fact of the matter is that everyone I've talked to in the last few minutes is in the same boat that I was 2 days ago. Too many blogs to read, not enough time. So I'm not the last remaining ignorant person. I also remember seeing stuff about XML and RSS and feeds etc, and having an inkling of what they were, but having no home internet access (that's another story), and having limited time on the crappy work computer to do my online stuff, I haven't been able to pursue it. Obviously I did think about it at some point because when I went to log on to bloglines, I was already registered, and my password was just what I would have expected it to be... I had never used it though.
 
So to all of you who are overwhelmed by the vast ocean of blogged info, online pics, and other stuff that you need to look at to keep in touch with your friends' and acquantances' lives, try it out. Bloglines

Tuesday, July 18, 2006

Shakira - Hips Dont Lie spoof

found this on google video... I thought it was disturbing, yet hilarious! Enjoy, especially all you Shakir fans!

Thursday, July 13, 2006

Overland Journey

The flight from Barcelona to Paris was cheap. As dictated by the mysterious forces that determine the cost of travel on budget airlines, all the flights back to Barcelona on or around the dates I wanted to return were prohibitively expensive. So I decided to take a bus.
 
Like I've mentioned before, one of the things I like about living in a region where everything is on a huge, connected mass of land, is that overland travel is possible. For an island-born, island-reared person like me, this is a remarkable concept. For example, in Bermuda, if the flights somewhere are cheap, the world is open to you. If the flights are expensive, and you don't happen to own a boat that can make a transatlantic journey, you are stuck on the 22-square-mile rock that you live on.
 
The idea of being able to (theoretically, of course!) walk from Istanbul to, say, Lisbon, or maybe from Oslo to Addis Ababa, if you so desired, completely boggles my mind. So the idea of catching a bus from Paris to Madrid really didn't bother me at all.
 
It was a long bus ride. I left Paris at 2:30 in the afternoon, after a picnic lunch of Chinese take-out on the grass in a park near the Baha'i Centre with Violetta. Luckily, the bus only made 2 stops before its arrival at 7:00 the following morning in Madrid. The dinner stop was at a rest stop area next to a beautiful wooded area somewhere in France. I have absolutely no idea where, except that most of the view out the window for the 2 hours before it, were of fields, mostly of grasses or sunflowers. I walked around, stretched, did some deep breathing, ate my dinner, and then just sat in the grass where I was, listening to the birds and the breeze in the trees.
 
I slept for most of the rest of the ride. Earplugs, an iPod, sleeping mask, book and a bottle of water were all i needed to ensure a great bus ride.
 
I arrived in Madrid at 7 and took the metro to the other bus station, where I had to buy a ticket to Zaragoza. That ride was 4 hours. The bus left at 9 a.m. and arrived on time at 1. Hector picked me up at the bus station, at about 1:10. Approximately 24 hours after I had said goobye to Violetta and headed for the metro to go to the bus station in Paris.
 
Now that I'm in Zaragoza, I have absolutely nothing to do. No demands on my time, a beautiful garden and lawn to sit in and think, or not think, whatever. A computer with internet access, a playstation, a guitar.... No complaints!

Tuesday, July 11, 2006

Paris Pics

I've just had a wonderful few days in Paris. My main aim in coming here was to hang out with Vi and see a few things in this city. I've done quite well on both fronts I think. Vi and I had a wonderful time! She showed me a new game as well, watch out Yahtzee, the Dice Game is here!!! Thanks so much for everything, Vi.
I spent a little time wandering around on my own and got to see some of the sights. I loved the Eiffel Tower and the Louvre Pyramid, but my favourite places I don't have pics of. We sat on the grass in a park near the Latin Quarter, next to a fountain. I loved it there. I went to the parts of the city that are inhabited mostly by immigrants, and walking down the street seeing people from all different countries, shops with stuff from everywhere, cuisine of all different countries... it was so cool. I didn't realise how much I missed that diversity in Istanbul. I got used to everyone around me being Turkish! That first day, wandering around, buying shampoo in a store with Black beauty products, visiting a restaurant and getting the Turks to help me because my French was awful! Seeing the market, eating in an Algerian Restaurant.... that's the Paris I came here for. I had a wonderful trip. Click on the pics and take a look at my Flickr Album.
Eiffel TowerMe and ViLouvre Pyramid

Arc de Triomph, Paris


Arc de Triomph, Paris
Originally uploaded by Krisia.
So I promised another Arc de Triomph, and here it is.

Friday, July 07, 2006

Barcelona


Barcelona
Originally uploaded by Krisia.
There's an Arc de Triomph in Barcelona. It's near the bus station. I'll post

a pic of the one in Paris, when I get there....

Leaving Istanbul


Leaving Istanbul
Originally uploaded by Krisia.
Photos of Istanbul as I flew from Ataturk Airport Wednesday, July 5, 2006

Leaving Istanbul


Leaving Istanbul
Originally uploaded by Krisia.
Photos of Istanbul as I flew from Ataturk Airport Wednesday, July 5, 2006

Leaving Istanbul


Leaving Istanbul
Originally uploaded by Krisia.
Photos of Istanbul as I flew from Ataturk Airport Wednesday, July 5, 2006

Leaving Istanbul


Leaving Istanbul
Originally uploaded by Krisia.
Photos of Istanbul as I flew from Ataturk Airport Wednesday, July 5, 2006

Leaving Istanbul


Leaving Istanbul
Originally uploaded by Krisia.
Photos of Istanbul as I flew from Ataturk Airport Wednesday, July 5, 2006

Leaving Istanbul


Leaving Istanbul
Originally uploaded by Krisia.
Photos of Istanbul as I flew from Ataturk Airport Wednesday, July 5, 2006

An Alitalian Adventure

I was planning to go to the States to Sherri's wedding. 2 months ago I realised that the obvious solution to my problems caused by the crashing Turkish Lira exchange rate, and the prices of flights around the most expensive weekend of the year to fly to the States was for me not to go. It was a hard decision to make, since I had been planning to go for a year, and I was due to play the violin in the wedding. What made it doubly hard was that it would be the first time our whole family was together in about 15 years. By family I mean my mom, her 2 sisters, and all the kids. I didn't want to miss that. Unfortunately I am. I realised that to spend over $1000 on the plane ticket, and then countless more on hotel, car rental, food etc, was just impossible. Especially with the lira-dollar exchange rate.

Cancelling this trip meant that I now had my first vacation since I came to Turkey. 3 weeks in which to do... what?

Let me add a little note here about budget airlines. Over on the other side of the world, I don't think there are things like RyanAir and EasyJet and that family of transportation. Some of the prices I may quote seem unbelievable, and that's the cool part.... Check out RyanAir.com and EasyJet.com if you don't believe me.

I looked online, and compared the prices of taking a holiday in Turkey, bus, hotel, meals etc, with the price of a trip to Paris to see Violetta. I found that if I combined a trip to Paris with a trip to Spain, I could travel for extremely little. Between a cheap round-trip ticket to Barcelona on Alitalia, and a crazy cheap (i.e. the price of a meal) ticket to Paris from Barcelona, I could spend less than 150 Euros total travelling. Combined with staying with friends (who I was dying to see anyway) and eating in, this trip was well within budget. So I booked it.

On July 5th, I was scheduled to leave Istanbul and fly to Barcelona via Milan on Alitalia. I was right on schedule with my plans to get to the airport, and was sitting on the seabus, when my phone rang. The lady from alitalia on the other end was trying to explain to me that the flight was delayed and I would miss my connection, so I would be going to Barcelona tomorrow, but I should come to the office and get a voucher. I had no idea what she meant. At first I thought I was going abck home to Kadikoy for another night and taking the flight the next day. She then explained that I would stay in Milan overnight and the airline would pay for the hotel and dinner and breakfast, and then I would be on the first flight to Barcelona in the morning. Dude, that was ok. I had originally planned to bunk on the couchat Peyman's flat in Barcelona, so staying in a hotel in Milan was a much better prospect. Especially since Pey was leaving early in the morning and I'd have to leave the house when he left. As long as I was in Girona (an hour north of BCN) for my flight at 8 in the evening to Paris, I'd be fine. So I tried calling Pey, couldn't reach him, and sent him an e-mail to let him know I wasn't coming.

I arrived at the airport, and the line at the ticket counter where I had to go to reorganise my flight plan and deal with the voucher, was long. After about 20 minutes, the lady called for all the Barcelona passengers to come to the front. After looking at the tickets and talking on the phone for a few minutes, she told us that there was a flight with another airline with a connection to Barcelona and that she would schedule us on that flight, so we would be in Barcelona that night. No Milan, actually the connection was in Vienna. Cool, I thought, as I tried to phone Peyman again and settled for sending him a text message. "I sent you an e-mail and voice mail saying that I wasn't coming, plans have changed, now I am. C U 2nite." Or something to that effect. The idea was first I was coming, then I wasn't coming, now I was coming again. For the next 45 minutes, the Alitalia woman reissued all our tickets again (they had been reissued earlier to include a Milan layover). Somewhere in the middle of the typing on the computer, talking on the phone and printing out and ripping up things, she got a phone call. Apparently there was a problem with the Vienna connection and we wouldn't be able to do it after all. More tickets ripped up, more reissuing, and the 7 of us Barcelona passengers stood looking harassed as all the other passengers received their reissued tickets and walked off happily to check in.

We finally got our new tickets (which were the same as the old tickets, not the original ticket, but the Mark II version. This was ticket Mark IV), and went to check in. At check-in, after finding out that in all the reissuing, I had lost my exit row window seat which I had taken the trouble of booking the day before . I then watched my bag go through, looked at the tag, and realised that it was checked to Barcelona. So I asked if I would get it in Milan, she said no. So basically, I was overnighting with no luggage. I asked if it would be possible to arrange for me to pick up my bag in Milan, she said no. It seemed strange to me, because everytime I've had an overnight connection, I've also had to pick up my luggage.... Luckily, my mom taught me well, and my carry on bag contained a change of underwear and toiletries.

We arrived in Milan an hour and half late. Exactly 9 p.m. The same time our flight to Barcelona was due to depart. I skipped the luggage conveyor but went over to baggage services just to make sure I didn't need to pick up my suitcase. It would suck to arrive in Barcelona the next day with no bag, especially since I was leaving for Paris the next evening.

I found 4 of the the other 6 Barcelona travellers at the luggage conveyor picking up their luggage. They said that at check-in, they were told that it was impossible to check it through to Barcelona since there was an overnight layover. That's when I started to get nervous. They had been told the exact opposite of what I had been told.

We went to the ticket counter to get our hotel vouchers. Got to the front of the line and were told to go to the check-in counter. There we met the other 2 stranded Barcelona-bound passengers waiting. THe guy at the counter said that someone else was coming and they should wait. He wasn't doing anything. We realised half an hour later that we were waiting for his shift to end, so someone else could come and deal with us. Not just anyone, but The New Girl. She had no idea what she was doing and was very easily confused. It took her about 45 minutes and 25 phone calls to start issuing us with vouchers for dinner and breakfast and hotel and airport transfers. Mine was finished first so I also asked her to check and make sure my bag was headed in the right direction. This was difficult for her, since while she was on hold for 10 minutes with the baggage people, it was impossible for her to handle the other passengers' vouchers. I told her to forget it and deal with them, since I was holding everyone up. It also came out that the other couple travelling, had been offered the option of collecting their bags in Milan, or sending them through to Barcelona.. Three groups, three different stories. All in all I was the only one out of the 7 of us who had no luggage....

While we waited, France scored a goal in the semi-final match and still we waited. As she was starting on the last voucher, she got a call. She then explained to us that the past hour and a half had basically been a waste of time. The flight to Barcelona had been delayed by 2 hours and was still here in Milan. That's the flight that ticket Mark I had us on. Of course, none of us still had ticket Mark I, and the inept agent we were dealing with now had to cancel 7 ticket Mark IVs, issue 7 ticket Mark Vs and check us and our luggage in to the flight. She informed me that my bag had already been put on the flight. Basically, the 9 p.m. flight was now leaving at 11:30 p.m. and we would arrive in Barcelona at 2 a..m. or something crazy like that. Hold up. I have cancelled my plans in Barcelona, re-made them and cancelled them. Now you're telling me that I have to give up this voucher in my hand which allows me to keep things as they are and rest tonight and fly tomorrow, and instead rush now to get reissued another time (which, in my experience that day, takes about 45 minutes) and arrive in Barcelona in the wee hours of the morning with nowhere to stay, and no public transportation. I told her not to bother with my ticket. I was keeping things how they were. She looked both surprised and relieved. That meant only 6 tickets to reissue. I told her to leave my luggage on the flight and I would see it in Barcelona the next day. I took my voucher and headed for my Italian dinner, and comfy hotel room.

The next morning, I didn't have to check in, because that had been done the night before and I had my borading pass, and no luggage. I got on the plane, and there, in seat 26A, my seat, was someone else with a boarding pass, also for seat 26A. I had to wait for the whole flight to fill up and took the last available seat, luckily also an A window. Our flight left with no delays. I arrived in Barcelona, all prepared mentally to give a description of my bag in Spanish to baggage services, because I knew it wouldn't be there. Thank goodness. I was wrong.

After my Alitalian Adventure, spending a day re-exploring Barcelona was relaxing and fun. I hopped on the shuttle to Girona, and caught my RyanAir flight with much less fuss and confusion. I arrived in Paris at 11 last night and saw Violetta. It was so good to see her again!!! This morning we went to a cafe around the corner for some coffee and a croissant, and now I'm heading out to explore Paris under overcast but comfortable weather....

Wednesday, May 24, 2006

Birthday Pic


Birthday Pic
Originally uploaded by Krisia.
We went bowling for my birthday. Here's a group pic....

Monday, April 03, 2006

It's been so long...

It's not that I have nothing to say. I just haven't been inclined to blog it. Let's see if I can sum up the last few weeks since my last blog in the 5 minutes I've given myself to blog it. Work's good, the cats are good, Rebecca (my flatmate) is doing well, her dad came to visit for a while and that was nice. We saw a solar eclipse last week (the partial in real life through a hastily-constructed pinhole camera which I somehow remembered how to make from high school physics, and the total simultaneously on television as it happened in Antalya, south of here. On a related note, during the eclipse, I was so excited that I called my parents, remembering later that we had just started daylight saving time, so I apologise mom and dad e because I think I called you at 4:45 a.m.! Geesh, and they were so sweet, they didn't even mention it! Also related, I've added myself to the Skypers of the world. I love it. If you want to add me then just add the word Krazy to myfirst name and there i'll be. I can't use it very often, since the work computer has no sound capabilities, however I go to an internet cafe nearby when necessary.

My Turkish is improving. I've lost most of my Spanish.

I'm still going to the gym every day. Still losing weight. I started a new "diet". Not so much a diet as a change in eating. After the first week I realised that I've been hungry since October! For the first time, I'm losing weight and I'm not hungry. That's nice. None of my clothes from last year fit. They look like they belong to a big fat woman. They did.

I met a guy. He's really nice. We hang out a lot. Mostly reading.

I was at my company class a couple of weeks ago and one of my students mentioned that there was a nother Bermudian woman living here. I've since met her. She and her sister are both married to Turks. Jennifer and Jane Conyers. There's another Bermudian in Istanbul as well, Denise something. The chances of 4 Bermudians in Istanbul are pretty slim. I thought it was kinda cool.

I cut my hair last night.

I'm doing latin dance classes. I'm getting really good, and having fun and making friends. Salsa, mostly, but also merengue, cha cha cha and bacchata. It's also half an hour's walk from my house, so I'm getting extra exercise.

I play squash. It's fun.

Time's up! Don't forget my birthday this Saturday :o)

Thursday, February 23, 2006

When and How did I get so BUSY?

When did it happen? I no longer have time to blog, answer e-mails check out Google Earth, Wikipedia or my friends' blogs. I haven't sent a personal e-mail of more than 5 lines in about 2 months. I can't figure out what's happening with my time. I let my class out early tonight, I was sick and tired of them. I know it sounds bad but it's true! I was teaching present perfect continuous, which always gets them because they don't have present perfect in their own language, and how do you explain a tense that is talking about the past but is actually the present? So that confused them on Monday and Tuesday and then today I go and throw in the continuous aspect of it and time words like "for" "since and "ago". English is so complicated! Anyway, I got tired of the looks of complete incomprehension from some of the students as I explained for the 15th time, while the other students sat there getting into trouble because they were bored.

Teaching is fun though.

I think my soluteion to my time problem is to get a computer at home. Unfortunately, that's way down on the list of priorities.

Speaking of priorities, my birthday is April 8th and I've already decided what I want. I would love 3 magazine subscriptions: Rodale's Scuba Diving, National Geographic, and Scientific American. No need for it to be a surprise. If you'd like to give me a gift that I'd really love, e-mail me and I'll give you my address :o)

Sunday, January 29, 2006

Gym folks go bowling


Gym folks go bowling
Originally uploaded by Krisia.
Last night I met up with some friends from the gym and made some new friends as well. We all went bowling and had a wonderful time! Afterwards we went to a cafe for the ubiquitous Turkish tea. Click on the picture or click here and check out the others!

Tuesday, January 17, 2006

Santa's a little strange in Turkey...

Maybe because of bird flu, he hasn't been eating chicken and lost a lot of weight. Also, he's been shopping for his suits at the Grand Bazaar.

Whatever the explanation, Santa definitely looks different in Istanbul!

Duygu


Duygu
Originally uploaded by Krisia.
When I started going to the gym a few months ago, one of the first people I met was Duygu. She's a (hmmm) I want to say sculptor, but I know that's wrong. She does ceramics stuff.... pottery... oh a potter! I guess... That's

what she studied in university. Right now she's a d.j. at Arka Oda, a bar in Kadikoy. She's also my squash partner. I owe her a Starbuck's coffee because I lost the match yesterday..... She's really nice, lots of fun :o) This is her in the mirror of the gym locker room....

flatmate, and her boyfriend


flatmate, and her boyfriend
Originally uploaded by Krisia.
This is Rebecca and her erkek arkadaş, Cengiz. He's a sweetie.

flatmate


flatmate
Originally uploaded by Krisia.
I realised that I have pics of the cats but none of my human flatmate,

Rebecca. She's from Oxford, England. She's the best flatmate in the world

:o)

Coffee Cups


Coffee Cups
Originally uploaded by Krisia.
I had my last lesson with my weekend class on Sunday. On Saturday evening,

they came over for dinner. They presented me with a gift, these coffee cups.

They are the small ones, designed for Turkish coffee (espresso or demitasse

cups). They're gorgeous, 6 different colours, gold rim, square instead of

round, very unique and pretty. They told me to think of them when I use

them, which I will :o)

Monday, January 16, 2006

Me and the Senior Education Adviser

Now that there are no other education advisers, Halil has promoted himself

and is now known as the Senior Education Adviser (a.k.a. Superman) :o)

Savaş and Barış


Savas and Baris
Originally uploaded by Krisia.
Savaş is in the foreground. Her name means "war", it's a common Turkish name. Barış, in the back, licking his lips, means "peace". Also a common Turkish name. I've heard Barış used for men and women, but Savaş is usually a boy's name.

We named them according to their characters, rather than their genders :o)

Crowded in the Bus


Crowded in the Bus
Originally uploaded by Krisia.
This is a shot I took in the bus when our train couldn't go across onMonday. The guy next to me is from Athens, and he was holding a lot of stuff in his lap because there was no more room on the floor of the bus, in the aisles or under the seats to put it!

Roman Ruins


Roman Ruins
Originally uploaded by Krisia.
Roman ruins in Thessaloniki.

A Thousand Words....


A Thousand Words....
Originally uploaded by Krisia.
Mom said I don't have enough pictures.... So the next few blog entries will be photos of some Thessaloniki things and I just took some pics with the office staff. I also took a large number of pics of Barış (pronounced BarUSH - rhymes with "push") and Savaş (pronounced Savash), the cats Rebecca and I adopted in October. They are our pride and joy. :o)



This first picture is of Doğan (that's a silent g in the middle there) and Kemal. Kemal is the nice trucker that gave us a lift. As you can see, he smokes. It was a long road to Thessaloniki!!!

Thursday, January 12, 2006

Lonely Planet and Budget Hotels

I grew up travelling. I used to go with my parents all over the place and we either stayed with friends or in a hotel. I had the impression that all hotels were nice, had indoor pools, room service, were immaculate and I never gave a thought to what they must cost. Until 2003, the only other times I'd stayed in hotels were when I was bumped from a flight and then they put me up in an airport Holiday Inn or something, still nice. I had not a clue.
 
When I was in Haifa, I went on a trip with some other people to the Galilee. I wanted to camp. They wanted a hostel. We went to a hostel. At the time I was appalled. I had never imagined sleeping somewhere so gross and grimy and hot and nasty, with a shared unisex bathroom and shower down the hall. It was a rude awakening. Since then I've found out that nice hostels exist, as do nice budget hotels. But they are a different category altogether from the idea of "hotel" that I grew up with. The Lonely Planet Guide books have been a godsend in terms of finding decent, but cheap hotels and hostels in unfamiliar cities. However, guidebooks are put together by a variety of travellers with a variety of standards, so I've found the best thing to do is leave your bags somewhere safe, get the Lonely Planet out, and comb the city for the budget hotels. Read between the lines on the entries, and find the best value. LOOK AT THE ROOMS!!! Don't trust the book! Don't say yes to the seedy reception guy who asks if you want the room until you've seen it. This is how I spent my day. The first place looked really good on paper. It mentioned that the reception was a little offputting so I expected the scary-looking hunchbacked man that greeted me in Greek. I did not expect the dark dingy room with sticky linoleum floor and toilet with gross stains in it... I think I left that place running. After a couple of similar experiences, I found The One. The hotel that no one knows about that somehow is a million times better than the rest but for the same price. I have a hunch that every city has that hotel. It's just a matter of finding it. I paid the money, had a cup of (complimentary) tea with the (handsome) receptionist guy, and headed off to explore the city and get my bag from the cloakroom of the other place.
 
The weather was beautiful, the city was gorgeous, and I had a great day. I found an Indian restaurant where I had lunch. It was absolutely delicious, though a bit too spicy. Now, about 10 hours later, large flakes of skin are peeling off the roof of my mouth... is that normal? It was good though!
 
I'm going back to the hotel to watch tv and read the books I brought with me. Trying not to think about the bird flu that awaits me in Istanbul.....
 
 

Wednesday, January 11, 2006

It's all Greek to me...

On Saturday evening after class, I made my final decision about my plans for the Bayram holiday. In the week leading up to that, I had gone through a number of options including, but not limited to: Fethiye with my flatmate, Bodrum and Rhodes, Skiing in Bulgaria with a gym friend, Plovdiv, Bulgaria with Georgina, visiting Violetta in Paris, and going somewhere, finding a cheap hotel, and chilling for a couple of days. Because of the 4.5 day bayram holiday (known to most people as Eid), which is celebrated with a ritual sacrifice of a sheep, or a cow, or some animal, and lots of eating and family get-togethers, I really didn't want to stay in Istanbul. I have nothing against holidays. However, during Kurban Bayram, I had been invited to quite a number of students' houses. I know from my experience back in 1991 that being at someone's house during Bayram means that you are a guest of honour when they serve the freshly slaughtered and prepared meat, the choicest part being the (ugh) liver, and to turn it down makes everyone sad, and is nearly impossible anyway. Having been invited by neighbours, students, people from the gym, etc, I realised the only excuse that worked was that I wouldn't be in Istanbul. That said, I had to make it so. I made my final decision and decided to go to Alexandroupoli. It's a small town near the Greece/Turkey border, on the Mediterranean. Cheap hotels aplenty (seaside towns in January are generally not in high season), and a short, cheap bus trip made it the ideal destination. Turks have trouble getting visas to leave the country, so I figured it wouldn't be crowded with Turks doing some Bayram travelling. So after class on Saturday, I headed down to the bus company to buy a ticket. All the buses were full. There was one on Wednesday, but since I was planning to be back by Friday morning at the latest (to meet with a Baha'i coming from Haifa to Istanbul), that wasn't an option. I hopped on a ferry and went over to the train station at Sirkeci to try for a train ticket.
Sirkeci Train station is the historical home of the Orient Express. You can read about it in books and stuff. It was also the first place I set foot in Istanbul back on August 12, 1990. I found out from the enthusiastic guy at the information desk that tickets were available, and I wouldn't be able to get the youth discount because I was over 27. Too bad. I went and got the ticket, but the ticket guy didn't ask my age, and I guess I look like I'm 26 or younger because I got the discount! Woo hoo :o))))
Anyway, at 7 yesterday morning I headed to Sirkeci to catch my train.
It was quite comfortable, and nice. The train was divided into booth-like compartments, with 6 comfortable, reclining seats in each. I was in one with a guy named Dogan, who had just come back from Israel. He had sat next to an Australian Baha'i 3 days before coming from Tel Aviv to Istanbul, and here he was in a train compartment with another! He had been thinking about it a lot since meeting her and had some questions to ask, which was pretty interesting. We chatted for a couple of hours, until we reached some place in the middle of nowhere, and 3 more people joined the compartment.
About 4 hours into the trip, what is suppposed to happen is that the last car of the train is attached to another engine and gets taken over the border. Up until then, basically we are on the local train to Edirne, so there are lots of stops. Lots. After the border crossing, the train gets attached to a local train to Alexandroupoli, and that ride takes an hour. I was expecting to be there at about 2 in the afternoon.
What actually happened is that they disconnected us from the local train, as they were supposed to. The rest of the cars headed back to Istanbul. They then told use that the bridge up ahead was flooded and we would be unable to cross. We were given 2 options. We could sit in the train and wait for 2 hours, and the next local train would take us back to Istanbul, where we would be able to come again the next day ( i.e. I left home at 7 in the morning, would get back home at about 8 at night, and would have to leave home again the next morning at 7 to do it all over) - I think NOT! The other option was to wait about 20 minutes, and the train company had arranged for a bus which would take us an hour south to the next border crossing. The problem with this option was that the bus that took us to the border would not be allowed to carry us across (the driver not having a visa for Greece) and you have to cross the border in a vehicle. Dogan assured me and the Greek tourists in the next car and the nervous british man from 3 cars down that there were taxis that could take us across, and that we would find a way. Of course the other problem was that once we were across the border, we would be in this place 100 km from any towns or anything with no transportation, but that we would deal with when we got there.
Given these two options, one of which would mean that I had wasted a day and gone nowhere, the other which had no conclusive plans, but definite adventure, I picked the obvious choice. An hour later (not 20 minutes) and freezing cold (it was about -7), I was in a minibus with 22 other adventurous travellers and their luggage, headed for the next border crossing.
Another hour later we were at the border. The minibus driver went in and had a chat with the border guards, and they agreed to let him take us across to the other side, but with a police escort. We were grateful, and collected some tips to give him. At this point, there was palpable worry on the bus about what would happen at the other end. I was going to alexandroupoli, a nearby town, but most of the other passengers were headed for Thessaloniki and Athens. We were nowhere near the train station and the taxis that we had been told would be on the other side weren't.
After the Turkish exit, and while waiting for the Greek entry process to be complete, a couple of Turkish container truck drivers came over and offered us rides. I have never been in a container truck before and I found out that in addition to the 2 seats for the driver and passenger, there are also bunk beds! Dude! So we rearranged ourselves into groups for the free rides. I joined a group going with Kemal. He was headed for Thessaloniki. OK so my destination was Alexandroupoli, but I heard that Thessaloniki was nice too, so what the heck! 5 hours later, we were at the port in Thessaloniki. It was 1 in the morning. I was tired, no exhausted. I knew nothing about the city I was in. The others headed for the train station to try and catch up with the train they would have been on, in order not to have wasted their ticket. I wandered around the city looking for a cheap hotel. I found a place that had heard about the train and gave me a great discount on a room for the night, I think in part because I looked so tired and pathetic. However, the hotel was about three stars more than I had budgeted for (my budget being in the range of "dirt cheap") so I knew that I would have to leave.
This morning I woke up and had the continental breakfast included in the price of the hotel and grabbed some maps and headed out.
Thessaloniki is a beautiful city! I realised then that I know not a word of Greek, except for what I heard on "My Big Fat Greek Wedding" which was a great movie, but not necessarily a very good language class!
Fortunately, everyone here is very friendly. Last night in the truck, reading the signs in Greek and English, and recalling the greek letters we used in maths, I was able to figure out most of the alphabet, so although I don't know the language, I'm not illiterate! I bought a lonely planet guide and investigated the budget hotels.
This requires a separate entry.