Thursday, May 16, 2024

Ireland Part One of Part One: Two Planes, A Bus, And Air BN

 

I play Pokemon Go, something I am neither proud nor ashamed of. I feel like there is a stigma about us Pokemon Goers, but if I try to make that into a joke segment of this book it will hit with only a small crowd, so it’s not worth mentioning…much. But I will bring it up briefly because it is relevant to this portion of my book. There isn’t a wide enough audience to justify dedicating an entire chapter to it; very few readers would heartily guffaw from those jokes. So when we got to the airport I didn’t expect to run into my cousin and his wife, even though they were leaving Colorado to fly to D.C. on the same day we were. If both of our flights were out of some Podunk little airport in middle of nowheresville, sure. But in this case, it was D.I.A., or the Denver International Airport, for those unfamiliar with airport acronyms.

On a “slow” day, there are hundreds of flights and thousands of travelers. To get to your departure gate, you take an underground train to one of three concourses. So, with all that considered, it was rather bizarre that we got off the train and onto the escalator immediately behind my cousin and his wife. Here is where the Pokemon Go enters the story; after my husband noticed we were behind my cousin and we exchanged shocked pleasantries, my cousin asked us if we were there JUST to play Pokemon Go. I mean…we were definitely playing it, but the thought of someone going to DIA, a place which takes an hour drive to get to, SOLE LY to play a somewhat infantile game, would be a bit insane.

Anyhow, we parted ways at the top of the escalator to go to our gate. Quick sidenote; we decided to go to Chick-Fil-A, and there was legitimately a meal that cost $6.66. That one can’t be popular at a place that Is basically catholic or Christian cultish. Of course, that part of the menu was photographed. I mean, how difficult would it be to make the cost of the meal $6.67? Or $6.68? I honestly believe that if they added one cent to the meal price they would notice an uptick in purchases by their cult followers who would be opposed to a meal priced with the mark of the beast.

Mark of the beast! Oh NO!

Another hilarity to me was my husband going through security. While waiting for our bags to go through the scanner, he noticed that someone had attempted to bring a full sized tube of toothpaste that they had to discard and it was on the floor since they had poor aim and missed the trash. I asked who in their right mind would attempt to bring something like that through security since, as we all know, some super awesome terrorist decided to complicate liquid-airport security relations. I made a comment about that, and Zack saw it and said “well, maybe it is a bomb.” (Yeah, Crest EXPLOSIVE paste! Or, Crestsplosion!) I hung my head for a second. That’s like yelling fire in a crowded theater. There are some words you don’t say while going through airport security; bomb, explosives, weapon, stab, trafficking, stalking, “can’t believe that made it through,” etc. Thankfully, he didn’t say it too loudly.

Anyhow, let’s fast-forward to the gate and the first of two flights to Dublin. We boarded in group 2, which I guess is semi-elite and surprising due to our economy-priced tickets. Surprisingly, the plane was a three seat per side and four seat in the middle situation, which was odd for such a short flight but whatever. Maybe the plane had international plans after us, which would have been convenient if it were going to Dublin. We watched Napoleon Dynamite together during the flight, and man, that movie is fuckin’ hilarious no matter how many times you watch it. It is truly an underrated cinematic masterpiece.

We unintentionally timed the film perfectly to the duration of the flight. Mad skill right there. We landed in Dulles, Washington D.C., with the perfect amount of layover time. After we deplaned, we waited for my cousin and his wife, briefly said another of many goodbyes, and walked down the terminal to our gate. Basically right as we arrived, our second flight was boarding.

I hate flying. I always have, and always will, despite having been on hundreds of planes. Turbulence freaks me out. I even have “there’s always turbulence” tattooed on my arm, lyrics from my friend’s song “Turbulence” (shout out, Lauren!). I lived with aerospace engineering students while I was earning my super-useful Spanish undergraduate degree and they explained it as the same as a car hitting a pothole, which didn’t ease my nerves at ALL. I mean, no metal object the size of any plane should be airborne. I don’t understand it and never will.

That’s why they serve you free alcohol on international flights! This time we watched 50 First Dates, for me for the millionth time, for Zack, I am unsure. I decided to go down a VERY deep rabbit hole regarding that movie. Skip the next paragraph if you have never seen it (because you live under a rock) and hate spoilers.

So the basic concept is that Henry Roth (Adam Sandler), a total playboy, falls for a woman, Lucy (Drew Barrymore), and later finds out that she has a memory-loss condition caused by a stray cow-induced car accident and can’t remember anything following the day before the accident. This in and of itself makes zero sense, because why wouldn’t she remember the hours of the day leading up to the crash? The neurologist she sees explains it as her slate being wiped clean every night. Honestly, just go watch the movie, her condition is so complex, and I am 99% sure fictional. However, Henry doesn’t have memory loss, and therefore grows to deeply love Lucy to the point he makes her a video (that’s how old this movie is) of their relationship so that every morning when she forgets his existence entirely, she can watch it and see the updated version of her life. He leaves the video for her to see right when she wakes up, and writes “good morning, Lucy!” in the hopes that she will play it immediately. You know what…I will make this topic an entire other blog later.

Fast forward a bit because I need to speed this thing up. It is our sixth day in Ireland, and in this story, we have not yet arrived.  

The plane landed, and despite glasses of free red wine at high altitude, some of which I spilled on myself due to intense turbulence, I barely slept. Thus, as you can surmise, I landed in the BEST mood imaginable (sarcasm; hard to do in written form) and booked it to customs (while Zack stopped to pick up a girly pink umbrella), which was thankfully, completely void of people. We breezed though, and Zack earned his first foreign passport stamp from Ireland. We rushed out with our backpacks and bought our bus tickets to Galway, another long leg of our journey. Not expecting rain, cows, sheep and horses along the road for those Irish bus trips means you’ve likely not been on one. While I tried desperately to get out of my funk and the one-track-minded idea of dropping our stuff at the first BNB, The Four Seasons (do those even exist in Ireland?) I seriously couldn’t. Thankfully, my husband is good at getting me out of those funks.

We invented a character named Ol’ Nan, who would somehow always find herself atop cliffs and falls off and as she fell would say in her “old Irish grandmother voice” “oh noooooooo” and then explode at the end. Nan’s character gets further formed the longer we were on our trip. More on that to come.

During our honeymoon, it scarcely rained. In my previous trips to Ireland, it rained every moment of every day. In those experiences, I wondered how people kept any part of their clothing dry. There is usually wind as well; I’ve lost many a good umbrella to the wind blowing them inside out. Let’s take a moment of silence for the fallen soldiers (please continue reading once you have taken your moment of silence. I’ll wait.).

What felt like eight lifetimes later, we arrived at the Galway Coach Station and de-bussed (why is “deplane” a verb, but not “debus”?), then began the walk to our first BNB. Of course, the rain began pouring most aggressively right when I felt easiest to aggravate, so when I started questioning if we were going to right way, I was ready to explode (like ol’ Nan). We returned to the station to ask for directions, and it turned out we were going the right way, but it was farther up the road than I thought. With this new, irritating information, we continued the long, rainy walk to the Four Seasons Air BNB, our shoes and socks drenched despite the best efforts of our umbrellas. Upon checking in, we discovered that the second “B” would be an additional charge, which ended up being the case for many throughout the trip.

Sidebar time. Why even say BNB, fully aware that EVERYONE considers the second B of breakfast to be included in your booking? If you go to a hotel you don’t really expect the second B unless you specified you wanted breakfast included. If you go to a hostel and the B is included, it is crazy luck, or a banana and some instant coffee (which at a hostel is still luxury).

Okay so we got our antique-style room key, unlocked the door to room 4, dumped our stuff on the floor, and looked around. This was my first time in Ireland that I didn’t do “the hostel thing” the entire trip, so this small ensuite room with two twin beds and one queen or double, I am not sure, with a TV may as well have been Buckingham Palace. We debated what to do for a bit, for example whether or not to nap or try to quash jet lag from the get go. We lay down for a bit and turned on the TV for a bit. The channel on which we landed was for a children’s show in Gaelic, which we decided is a bizarre sounding language trying to shroud swear words and words like “Hitler” or “white supremacy.” That quickly became an inside joke. Of course, Gaelic is not a white-supremacist language. It won’t let me upload the video/s we took because I don’t to pay for blog extras, but here is one creepy example:

/https://youtu.be/uM8iMNinYdc?si=hZZh0yFuqwLR_34V

Then something caught my eye. THE SUN! When in Ireland, especially for short time periods, you RUN from wherever you are inside to go be in it and take pictures so you can pretend it is green at all times. So we went outside. We explored.

Sunday, August 30, 2020

Blue Lawn Chair

Apparently, I care about lawn chairs.
I’ve always known that I typically give inanimate objects personalities and feelings. The “As-is” section at IKEA (what is with that name? There doesn’t need to be a hyphen between “as” and “is.” Also, if they are going to do that, why is “is” not capitalized?? Or is that their attempt at trying to be charming and show they are based in a place where English is not the first language?) depresses me like you couldn’t believe. Sad, friendless, broken items longing to be chosen by those passing through, often times dealing with the shoppers’ mockeries.
 
Okay, call me crazy. Whatever. I’ll accept it.
 
When last in Minnesota, I stayed with relatives who live in a house with a lovely backyard leading to a lake with a dock. One day during my trip, someone placed two blue plastic lawn chairs on the aforementioned dock. That evening (or maybe it was the next? It really doesn’t matter in the grand scheme of this story) the weather took a turn for the worse; heavy winds, a deluge of rain, and a tornado of death, Wizard of Oz style (maybe I am being a bit dramatic…except for the wind). So, this torrential wind blew one of the two blue plastic lawn chairs into the lake.
 
There it sat, all day. I couldn’t help but think of the poor, abandoned lawn chair ending up like the items in IKEA’s “As-is” section (GAH! Just capitalize “is” and remove the hyphen!). All alone, insults from even the broken and discarded IKEA items pummeling it from all angles in Swedish, mocking the blue lawn chair for being a lame American item wanted by no one.
 
By the second day, the lake even decided it didn’t want Blue Lawn Chair in its waters and had pushed it to the most muck and algae-ridden part of the lake. Enough was enough. I stood up on the dock in my swimsuit and declared (to no one, but out loud) “I’m going in!” And in I went. I cannot adequately describe the revolting, stomach-churning feeling of swimming through and attempting to stand in the thick, mucus-like algae and who knows what else in which Blue Lawn Chair had ended up. All I can say is I felt submerged in some radioactive waste, surely full of disgusting parasites and leeches, conforming around my body, giving me some horrific super power like being able to pop my eyes out and juggle them. Absolutely purposeless except maybe as a weird party trick.
 
I grabbed Blue with one arm, determined to evade my demise as the eyeball juggler, but equally determined to get Blue (new nickname) back on the dock. The rigid plastic edges of the chair scraped my arms and legs, and I struggled to get Blue onto my back, carrying him (or her??) to safety like a drowning child. Eventually, I made my way back, thrust Blue onto the dock, and climbed up myself. I noticed cuts on my legs that later would be surrounded by bruises. But it was worth it to get Blue reacquainted with Other Blue Lawn Chair. I sighed with relief, proud of my efforts.
 
Then, the wind blew an innertube left on the dock into the lake. I declared, with less gusto and again to no one, “I’m going in.”


Thursday, April 2, 2020

Climbing Forever

Hey readers. Or reader. Or an empty, readerless void. I am stuck at home, because Corona-tine (doesn't have too great of a ring to it, maybe I'll just stick with Corona Quarantine), and it is raining to boot. Woot. I'm a poet and didn't know it. So I figured I would finally publish a blog that's been sitting in my drafts for many months. Enjoy. Or don't.

November, 2019

Four years ago, on November 19, 2015, I climbed for the first time. I instantly fell in love with it; I had discovered my life passion. My relationship with climbing grew and blossomed and quickly became something I couldn't imagine living without.

I was listening to Dax Shepherd's Podcast, Armchair Expert, today and he said that he feels sorriest for people who don't know what they love. This may sound extreme, but I felt pretty lost trying to discover my life passion, and to know what I love. I knew it was climbing the instant I ascended my first route at a climbing gym. At times, I think back and wish I'd discovered it earlier. Yet, perhaps everything in life happens at exact moments for just the right reasons. I am thankful for every route I have climbed or fallen from, and every boulder problem mastered or unsolved. I cherish every memory with every person (or guinea pig) with whom I have climbed. Sharing my life passion with others brings me immense joy, and I love to see people encounter the challenges and reap the benefits that come from this amazing activity.

I've participated in a number of activities like yoga and running to try and quiet my mind over the years. However, no matter how hard I try, I couldn't get my thoughts to settle down. Climbing changed all of that. It feels always intuitive, always natural, and always something I should be doing. People think I am insane for climbing the flatirons in Boulder without ropes. People ask me why I climb or if it scares me and the honest truth is it doesn't. I climb because I have to, I love to, and it is what I should be doing. When I am on the rock, my mental chatter goes quiet.

In honor of this momentous occasion, my four year anniversary with climbing, I decided to finally post a draft blog I wrote in August about soloing the second flatiron. Enjoy!

August, 2019

As of this morning, I have solo climbed the second flatiron 100 times.

I don't write about climbing as much as I should considering the role of unparalleled importance it plays in my life. When first introduced to the sport, it felt like I finally found my passion in life- something for which I'd been searching a long time. About six months after climbing and my relationship began, I free soloed the second flatiron with a friend. I don't recall feeling scared of climbing with no ropes; on the contrary, I felt free and peaceful.

Soon, I couldn't get enough of soloing the second flatiron. Anytime the weather was nice, I carved out time in my day to head to Chataqua to do so. Over the years, free soloing has forced me to overcome seemingly unsurmountable mental obstacles. For example, there is a jump on the second flatiron called the "leap of faith." At first (and understandably so), most people are intimidated by the idea of jumping from one rock to the next. It appears so much more terrifying than it is, and for my first 16 climbs up the second, I was too scared and found a way to avoid it. When I finally decided to face my fear, I realized how much easier it was to do the jump. Conquering that fear was a game changer for me.

I now solo with friends, first time climbers, and have climbed the first three flatirons with over ten guinea pigs. Those places are my sanctuary, and I am so glad to still have such a strong relationship with climbing.



Climbing with Bilbo

Climbing with Gandalf
Climbing with Legolas


Climbing with Mario

Climbing with Dave



Climbing with Neo



Ireland Part One of Part One: Two Planes, A Bus, And Air BN

  I play Pokemon Go, something I am neither proud nor ashamed of. I feel like there is a stigma about us Pokemon Goers, but if I try to make...