New post!! The ghost at the Del, and as it turns out, Loews Coronado. Part 1!!
http://www.seeplacesbedifferent.com/del-1/
Travel is complicated when you're not a millionaire. Limited options, cultural differences and, sometimes, outlets bent on setting your hairdryer on fire can make it hard. From Caving in Bethlehem, to Behind the Ropes in Vegas, I've found a lot of things that no guidebook shared. I'm younger, female and looking for different things than what the big travel books wanted to tell me.This is what I've found and how I found it. I hope it helps you travel, respectfully, and on your own terms.
Friday, November 30, 2012
Monday, November 26, 2012
3 New Poems on www.SeePlacesBeDifferent.com, Sweeeet Synopsis
A Buffalo Half-Hour - www.SeePlacesBeDifferent.com/Bflo
Probably the second most abstract poem I've ever written (don't be scared), this one is about the loss of first love. Every metaphor has meaning, many have multiples. I was hoping for a visual & visceral reaction when I wrote it. When you have a broken heart you're not thinking so much as feeling your way through for a bit.
Yet - www.SeePlacesBeDifferent.com/Yet
Also abstract but very easy to decipher in comparison. This was written years after "Buffalo", about a longing for lost love - but about no one man in particular.
Yet Again - www.SeePlacesBeDifferent.com/yet-again
This is the story to follow up "Yet." It's the story of a particular memory that my mind went to after writing "Yet."
Both "Yet" and "Yet Again" were written in between travels, and what I've learned about myself is that when I ignore that nomadic throb, the feeling is the same as a break-up - it's one of lost love. I was in a very happily committed relationship when they were written, and the loss is not of a person but of a place - an unrequited love of new adventure.
I hope you enjoy them. I'm attached to them in ways I can't adequately explain and I adore the link.
Cheers!~
Monday, November 19, 2012
www.SeePlacesBeDifferent.com - NEW F'in AWESOME WEBSITE
After 3 months and almost (now over) 3,000 readers from 11 different countries, I've officially launched my own website. I'll post notifications here when there is new material, but the new stuff itself can now be seen at....
www.SeePlacesBeDifferent.com
The new home of Buffalo Girl Travel.
World Prepare.
www.SeePlacesBeDifferent.com
The new home of Buffalo Girl Travel.
World Prepare.
Monday, November 12, 2012
Invitation - Inspirational & Short Commerical Break
Invitation
Come to me,
and walk with me
beneath a moonlit sky,
beside roses disguised as perfumed forests
by the darkness of the midnight hour.
Come to me,
before the candles are burned
to a pool of useless wax,
and their mystery is replaced
by the glare of the morning sun.
And I will show you
dreams without need of sleep,
and walls made transparent
simply because
they were only mirages to begin with.
Friday, November 2, 2012
My Nemesis In Northern Israel
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| Israeli Rooster |
*** Please note this is the 3rd installment of a story on Israel. Please read the previous two articles on Hiking and Uzi's to fully understand the context. Thanks. ***
The first week I slept through it. I was too exhausted from jet lag, ancient staircases built at about a 90 degree angle with a 200 step minimum requirement, and 7 mile fantastic but crazy hikes through various areas in Israel. I didn't know the Rooster was stalking our little dorm room. But he was.
3 AM sometime during the second week I find myself awake. Why the fuck would I be awake? Yesterday was a 5 hour jaunt through a Roman Era cave system in Bethlehem. I should be dead to the world.
Slowly it comes together in a haze and a cacophony - the loud, loud, persistent noise filling our stone-walled room. What in God's name... is that a ROOSTER? I thought roosters crowed at dawn? Don't roosters crow at dawn? That's why they're on farms, weather vanes... this has to be a joke.
Silence.
3:15 AM. I sit straight up in bed as a screech comes in through the windows and seems to inhabit my bones before rattling them and moving onto my head. I look at the windows. They're closed. This is one determined feathery motherfucker, because it takes effort to get that kind of noise through walls and closed windows.
This can not happening because tomorrow we are again waking up at the crack of dawn (when the Rooster should be doing what he's doing now if my childhood storybooks were right) before venturing out on another - slightly insane but awesome at the same time - educational adventure. I need sleep.
It's quiet again, but this time there's hesitation and fear in the air. Is he just resting?
No, he's quiet for the rest of the night. The next morning at breakfast I ask around about the rooster - "Did you hear that thing last night?" No one heard it but my roommates. Why? He was sitting right outside our window. He'd marked us. I eat my fruit in silent thought, the radio, always tuned into national news, just background noise this morning.
The next night, exhausted from a day of debates and cultural confusion, I literally fall into my bunk.
2:07 AM. It's not a cock-a-doodle-doo. Anyone who thinks it is has never heard a rooster crow. It's more like the screeching noise before a car accident. I start to giggle. My roommate in the bed next to me joins in.
4AM. It's been quiet for almost 30 minutes straight. But we all know it's coming again.
No one sleeps much for the next two nights. By then, I'm looking around the room for weapons because in my sleep-deprived mind and drained body, it's him or me.
Day five one of our tour leaders, Eytan, a deeply religious and kind man from South Africa, takes us to the Rooster's "family." Before we leave, he gathers myself and my three suffering roommates and tells us to act like we're really tired so the family understands the depth of the situation. Not a problem.
Only two of us wind up going. I don't remember why. Maybe the others were napping. Or had ear-plugs.
When we arrive, we discover that the Rooster belongs to an Orthodox family living next door and they don't really care one way or the other because - and here's the kicker - they think the Rooster's lucky. Let me repeat that. They think he's lucky.
Look, I'm not unsympathetic to mystical beliefs. I respect them. I have a few myself that I treasure. But I'm sporting under-eye bags dark enough to make me look like I went a round with Mohammed Ali and yawning like I've been regularly deprived of oxygen. He may very well be lucky to them. But something bad's going to happen if there isn't a change in the situation. And I suspect that's why they moved him in the end.
Looking back, I think maybe he was lucky. Not that I want to experience that again, and not that I (admittedly) can look at a Rooster now without picturing dinner, but I will always remember the Rooster of Tzfat. And so will my roommates. He's left an indelible mark on our subconscious, and he brought us even closer together than before. Common enemies tend to do that, after all.
He makes me laugh, remembering him with his chest puffed up before each crow and that beady little look in his eyes. I could've stepped on him and ended his world but he was Israeli to the core. He'd find a way out, and he knew it. And he was protected by a family that loved him on levels they couldn't fully explain.
If that doesn't describe my feelings towards Israel, I don't know what does. So, Cheers! To the Rooster of Tzfat!
I'll bet he would have been tasty.
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