I'm in Rio. I flew in at 6:00 am yesterday and by 8:45 was through customs and in an i-to-i taxi with Octavio who spoke very little English. It sounds really hackneyed to say this (I feel like it's said about every foreign city) but the drivers in Rio are insane. Forget signals. Forget stopping distance. Forget using the horn sparingly. Also, during rush hour people stand
in the road selling candy and papers and something on sticks that I didn't figure out. The traffic signs were in different fonts which was kind of hard for me. The house is beautiful, very airy, lots of archways, tiled walls, etc. We have a pool and a huge garden. No big deal.
Yesterday I did a whole bunch of things which I may elaborate on later but will just list now:
- Went to the supermarket (the neighborhood of Gloria is really lovely, and the streets are full of supermarkets and sandwich shops and fruit vendors etc). It's been so long since I grocery-shopped that I've actually forgotten which foods are staples. Also they don't have peanut butter so I just bought Nutella for my toast.
- I walked the streets in the neighborhood last night for a long time. People sell all kinds of shit on the sidewalk: one man had a blanket with a record player, underwear, Halloween costumes, dolls, and an old horn. I'm thinking of getting some of this street underwear for souvenirs. Anybody interested?
- Last night, a large group went to Ze's, a tiny bar at the bottom of the hill owned by this wonderful old man that's so local and so rustic in every way. The cash register has old-school buttons and the toilets don't have seats and the wall is lined with bottles and everywhere. I'm in love with it and I get the feeling I'll be spending a lot of time there (drinks are CHEAP. Like R$2 ($1.50) for 600 mL of beer cheap). I had my first legal drink ever (though Brazil doesn't give a care about legal drinking age, they sell liters of vodka for R$5 [that's like three bucks] in the supermarket and you can walk wherever you please with whatever in your hand) - a caipirinha, the national drink, which is made with cachaca and lime juice and like 5 spoonfuls of sugar. It was SO STRONG I only had one and one was enough. We then walked to Lapa which is THE PLACE TO BE on weekend nights in Rio. It was insane and in my tired state I was dazed as hell -- Lapa is a neighborhood with quite a few clubs, but on the weekend the party moves outside and about 10 square blocks are crammed with people, live samba music is playing at every corner, people are selling caipirinhas or tequila shots or skewers of meat all over, there are kids and transvestites and tall, gorgeous people everywhere. Puts Sayles dances to shame. I only stayed out until about 2:30 but some of my housemates came in around 6.
This morning I went for a run at the Flamengo beach (literally a 5 minute walk from my houuuuse) and it was AMAZING. The weather was absolutely beautiful and the beach was small and lively and safe and when I stopped this old man joked to me in Portuguese "you go 5 more!" The beach directly faces Sugarloaf Mountain and when I turned around I got a really clear view of Cristo (actually creepy, he's just LOOMING and dark on top of his huge hill). I'm coming back tomorrow. And the next day.
Here's my house from the outside:
My room:
My bed is the bottom one on the left side in the first room. Yes, I sleep with 8 people. It's gonna make that Burton single all the better come September.
The house is on top of this huge hill. I'm not kidding, it's the largest hill I've ever climbed not hiking. You go up and up and up -- there's a (steeper, more stair-filled) shortcut but still it's about 5 minutes of hill-climbing to go home. Octavio joked when he dropped me off "I hope you have strong leg!" I have a feeling I will by the end of the summer.
Also you can see mountains and Cristo (if you squint) from outside the house.
The people are cool thus far; I feel right now very similar to how I did at the beginning of camp two years ago, and the fact that turned out quite well makes me feel more encouraged about anything I'm uncomfortable with right now. There's only one other American who coincidentally is also from Minnesota. Also, almost everybody is here for only four weeks. That means I'll be leaving with an ENTIRELY different group that I've met. Right now I'm in the living room with like 8 others. We're watching High School Musical 2 on Brazilian television. The projects don't actually start until Tuesday (we get taken to them on Monday for orientation), so right now it feels like a weird vacation instead of a volunteer trip.
Heavens this is long. I miss you all, and if you've read this all the way to the end, I miss you especially much. MORE SOON. (not as much more though)