Wednesday, June 24, 2009

tick tick boom

i know i've been saying it for a good while now, but i swear to god i can HEAR the time rushing by my head these days.

i'll elaborate properly on these half-ass updates once i'm home.
ps-i'm so not ready to leave.

stories that will get more love later:
i went to fiji! it ruled.
friendliest people in the world! BULA.
even the flight was glorious. air pacific? check plus.
horseback riding on the beach, life goal in itself, and then guide casually points to the island upon which castaway was filmed. sweetest life.
drank fijian beer at the swim up bar.
a lot.
you would have too--it was delicious.
started packing. it hurt my heart. i stopped.
after my exam tomorrow, we're going into the city.
i want to kiss the bridge and the harbor "see you soon."
(note word choice--not "goodbye")
i have a pile of stuff i'm giving to my loves who are staying/live here.
now i don't have to throw away towels, sheets, books, etc! little victory.
one final hoorah barbie on the beach tomorrow.
also-i think we're going to make serious BILLS if we recycle our proudly displayed bottle collection.
i'm sticking my head in the sand and pretending i'm not leaving.
sometimes it works, sometimes not.
for now i am literally soaking up sun of last day outside library.
trying so dearly to focus.
tough job.
si se puede!

more later!

MUST STUDY NOW!

the end.

love,
kasey

Sunday, June 14, 2009

cliffnotes.com

i would rather write 3,000 words on here than for my research paper.
but, sadly, writing epically here doesn't contribute to a grade/completing a course.
que lastima.

cliffnotes upon which i'll elaborate later:

-went to melbourne. heaps of fun rocked out on highest vantage point in southern hemisphere. drank wine not from a box. luna park and hipsters in st. kilda. 
-great ocean road=best ocean road. drove on the left side of the road. didn't die! great success. the pictures are perfect bc great ocean road is perfect. i would gush happiness everyday if i lived on that road somewhere. saw twelve apostles at sunset. as pretty as the posters.
-finals are impossible. thankfully grades aren't life...life is life.
-thus despite finals season, i am going to FIJI in three days.
-yes, i said fiji.
-with luck we'll hit up the island upon which castaway was filmed. with serious luck, i will meet wilson.
-last wknd we flew to brisbane. it was a calm city. so we amped it up a bit by singing karaoke with a herd of irishmen. it was superb. needless to say, a standing ovation resulted.
-drove to byron bay (again, left side, no tragedies, great success). it RULED. went to lighthouse/most easterly point in all of australia so many hippies. our hostel had ads on the wall for dreadlock maintenance. bought australia necklace. i'll keep that puppy forever.
-surfer's paradise. didn't surf. sad irony. pretty beach.
-still entirely unprepared to come home.
-australia is life.

BACK TO WORK!

the end.

love,
kasey

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

"garlicious"

I should begin with the fact that this blog is a big, fat lie. And by that I mean that, perhaps, it’s not really always sunny in Sydney. It rains in paradise, too. And even though it poured a bit monsoon-ish for half the weekend (think umbrellas turning inside out courtesy of the wind), Epic Australian Weekend still shined like nobody’s business—rain or not.

Friday morning surf session called off thanks to whack weather patterns and lame waves.Resolution One: More Surf! Headed to city early (early meaning I set my alarm for 10am). It’s nuts that the city is so accessible to us but that we use it so relatively infrequently. Resolution Two: More City! Hit up markets, bartered with tiny old ladies, bought some dresses (necessary for rest of Epic Australian Weekend). Sydney fish market for lunch. Infuckingcredible. Best seafood of life? I think so. Resolution Three: More Seafood!

We went classier than usual and bought tickets to a fancy jazz club Friday night. Rumored to be, and proved to be, quite awesome. Heard the best trumpet player in all of Australia. Not too shabby. Resolution Four: Become the Best _____ in Australia (note: trumpet player is already taken)! To complete the circle of class, after the show, at 2am, in new dress and heels, I got a happy meal from McDonald’s. I think it was the first happy meal I’ve had since the 90’s and it was perfect.

Saturday, the animals came out to play. I partly mean my friends and I, and I partly mean the dozens of beautiful horses that we watched at the races. First of all, let it be known that the races are a fancy-pants event. Every dude was in a suit. Every chick was in a dress. Most chicks had those absolutely ridiculous goon-ish hats or bizarre hair pieces. Really, I mean,really—who finds those attractive? When in Australia, I suppose. Except that we didn’t have it in us to buy/wear a hat. Seriously though, top notch people watching in there! Imagine a 70+ year lady dressed to the nines screaming her 70 year old vocal chords off in the name of “Brownie” the horse. Or a whole herd of young suited dudes drunkenly exchanging serious sums of cash and consulting spreadsheets about horse speed. Nonsense.

Saturday night surprise! I will always have a soft spot for surprise parties. Something about being hunched down in the dark with a group of people, all with beer in one hand and noise makers in the other. It gets me every time. But the party was a great success. It reminded me of the whole series of Sakura surprise parties we had in high school. Oh memories.

Sunday the games continue. Literally. Went to Aussie Rules Football game aka AFL aka such fun. Perfectly sunny day—another “this is winter?” moments. The game is quite bizarre…circular field, kind of like rugby, kind of like soccer, kind of like quiddich. When red flags waves wildly or the crowd erupted, I cheered. It was pretty foolproof. Some of those players though, just dAAAmn. They jumped like Shaq and you probably could have cut steel with their thighs. Beasts.

In true Epic Australian Weekend fashion, it didn’t end there. One trip to the butcher and bottle shop later, we had ourselves a beach barbie on our hands. Kebabs, beer, guitar sing-alongs, crashing waves. I wanted that moment bottled for all of eternity. It was that kind of good.

And then, sadly, the Epic Australian Weekend came to a crashing halt as a I stayed up until 4am writing a lab report jacked up on six cups of tea. Rough experience? Sure. Worth it/the weekend? Surely. I’ll sleep when I’m back on American soil.

Melbourne this weekend!

On a scale of 1 to excited, I’m running about a 12.

Great Ocean Road!

Sweetness, ahoy.

Just bought my plane tickets to Brisbane (for neeext weekend) last night. Irish Invasion Revival Tour on Thursday and Friday in Brisbane, Byron Bay exploration on Saturday, and Surfer’s Paradise on Sunday! Oh boy. Am I ready? Is Australia ready? Irrelevant. We’re comin’! Still trying to make Fiji work...hitting a few roadblocks. Knock on wood, the decreasingly awesome exchange rate, and my powers of persuasion.

I come home in exactly one month. Holy shit.

I love you all to shreds (and miss you accordingly to this excessive love), but I am absolutely in no way even close to ready to being ready to fly home. This country already runs too deep in my veins. I’m working on get rich quick schemes that will enable me to have houses on both east coasts…and funds to fly back every week or two. I’ll let you know how it goes.

The end.

Love,

Kasey

 

Sunday, May 17, 2009

"if the goon is good for you, you should be good for the goon."

Those of you who know me well, or have lived with me, are aware of the arsenal of vitamins I keep under my bed. So imagine, for a moment, me in Australia, rummaging underneath my bed trying to find my multivitamins and Emergen-C. Then imagine the color draining from my face and my saying “Oh shit!” aloud, twice. The first time, casually, because I thought I didn’t have enough multivitamins left for the rest of my time here. The second time, worlds more upset, because I counted and realized that I did and as soon as (what seemed like so few) of those vitamins were gone, so was I.

So prompted by a freaking jar of multivitamins, I’ve made the painful realization that time is picking up the pace for my final month on this glorious island. And now that the tick-tick-boom of the clock is the loudest it’s been, I do believe it’s time to kick this life into the highest gear. I’ll sleep, take care of myself, save money, and be a responsible citizen when I get back to CTholla.

For instance, there’s a good chance I have tonsillitis. Thus, I was faced with a decision today: see a doctor or go surfing. Anyway, the waves were wonderful and I’ll make an appointment for tomorrow. Priorities? Check. Seriously though, the “saltwater heals all” theory is proven further. I completely wiped out once, spin-cycle under water, bonked on the head by my board, etc. As a result, I swallowed a mouthful of Pacific goodness. And, no surprise, my throat felt light years better once I got out of surf! Thus, I walked home feeling better, wonderfully sandy wetsuit over my shoulder, a single rose in one hand (gifted to me by a very drunk, very friendly 40+year old Australian man), 50-cent ice cream cone in the other, and barefoot. Today was the exact medicine I needed.

In other news, we partied with the Australian water polo team this weekend. As in: The Professional Australian Water Polo Team. I was impressed with the fact that some of them qualified for the Olympics. I was more impressed with the fact that they ensured that all of us always had a beer in hand. Thanks, team! Much appreciated.

In other sports and alcohol related news (of which there is, surprisingly, plenty of) last weekend I spent the best $20 of my life. Seriously. Twenty bucks got each of us: a gift bag (including chocolate, shampoo/conditioner, picture frame, perfume, massage thing, plenty of weird shit), raffle tickets, unlimited champagne and wine, unlimited Red Bull, unlimited food (including wraps and meat pies!), and entrance to a full day of Aussie rugby games! When’s the last time a twenty got anyone that much wonder? Answer: never. Although the money didn’t exactly buy us the sunshine and new friends, such things were also enjoyed. Days like this make me fall head over heels (for the millionth time) for this nation. In further sports-alcohol related news, Beer Olympics were held on the beach this weekend. I was a spectator, loved it, and didn’t go more than two minutes without laughing. It was quite a spectacle. Miraculously, booze-in-public laws were magically overlooked for the festivities.

We have already christened next weekend as Australian Immersion Weekend. We’ve realized there are plenty of things we’ve been intending to do that remain undone, so why not pack them into 48 hours? Surfing all morning on Friday. Famous fish market (largest in world?) post-surf. Friday night: bar on harbor (aka the goal is to drink while in view of the bridge). Saturday: Randwick races! Horse races=big doins’ here. Needed: fancy dress, big goofy hat, betting money. Sunday: AFL game to watch some men (in wildly short shorts and not nearly enough protective padding) battle, pretty much.

This weekend extravaganza is dependent, of course, on my making it through this week. Apparently, in Australia sometimes, I need to do work. I never consented to this, didn’t realize this was part of the deal. Bad timing that just as I mandate the need to kick Living into high gear, school also kicks itself into high gear. All shall be well, though. I’ll just keep swimming, just keep swimming, just keep swimming.

In related news, I’m now teaching two girls (my age) how to swim. Wild! So far, so good. I’ve got one of them floating and the other swimming on her back. We are all quite proud of these accomplishments.

It’s approaching winter here? Question mark in place because I am still wearing flops and t-shirts. And because I spent all day at the beach today. It’s cooler than it was, but it still smells like summer to me. Australians, though, are freaking out about how cold it is! My Aussie dude friend wore a HAT the other day. I wore a tank top. It’s all relative.

If I have to leave this paradise at some point, and apparently I do, it’s pretty sweet to leave right as it becomes officially winter here and to return to the heart of summer at home. Endless summer quest? Looking good.

Also looking good for the next month: road trip to Brisbane, Surfer’s Paradise, Byron Bay annnnnd, perhaps, a little trip to this place called FIJI. Fingers crossed (and wallet open).

I still miss all your pretty faces. And I’m sorry I’m failing, major league, on postcards. I shall up my game asap.

The end.

Love,

Kasey

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

"complaining rights revoked. you live in AUSTRALIA!"

sorry for my most recent m.i.a. status on here. if it's any consolation, i've been only slacking on my blog, not in my life. anyway, there's no way to possibly cover, chronologically and interestingly, all i've neglected to write about in the last month. so i'll dish the shiniest, silliest, most glorious parts in ridiculous, jumpy, unrelated, chapter snippets. ready? go!

chapter one: nemo's location: no longer a mystery

for how obsessed i am with the ocean and all its glory, i find it a bit nuts that i hadn’t explored meters below the sea until now. scuba is officially added to my list of favorite verbs. we checked up on coral, clown fish, sting rays, oh my. there are few things more baller than breathing thirty feet underwater. one thing more baller than that, though, would be breathing thirty feet underwater among one of the wonders of the world. scuba diving in the great barrier reef? great (barrier) success. and the life goal checks keep on swooshin’…

chapter two: the third time i signed my life away in a week

this chapter title is no exaggeration—extreme activities require some serious waivers. so, by the third time i was presented with paperwork including phrases like “in the instance of serious injury or death, i hereby hold [whoever it is i’m entrusting my life to today] in no way responsible and thus give up all my legal rights,” i just skimmed and signed the dotted line. YOLOB. anyway, this final feat was certainly the most extreme. just climb stairs for a good twenty minutes, try not to look down/process how high you are, reach the top, have some random tattooed dude tie some cord to your ankles, smile for the camera, and jump to your adventure/death! who WOULDN’T want to bungy jump? but in all seriousness—one of the best things i have ever done. worth every dollar and every risk. the rush is beyond words, though closely illustrated by some dudes we met at the top who live there and continue to go every single weekend! one day when i’m older… for now, though, life goal: bungy jump and survive—check!


chapter three: no shoes allowed

so over break we lived on a boat for three days and, although i didn’t think it possible, i fell in love with the sea a little bit more. i knew the trip would be good news as we all gathered on the dock before we took off. some dude (who would soon prove to be The Man and part of our crew) requested that we all take off our shoes, put them in the canvas bag he was holding, and informed us we’d get them back in three days. barefoot life is the best life. the cruise/scuba boat/popeye lifestyle vessel was also BYOB. given that it was mostly 20-somethings and that glass wasn’t permitted, we all brought bags of goon (think franzia). The Man gave us a marker, told us to mark our bags and toss it in the “booze trolley” (which was glimmering with countless silver bags of deliciously cheap wine). Among other sweet adventures on the boat excursion in the whitsunday islands, we checked out whitehaven beach (voted second best beach in the world according to the all-knowing national geographic!), went snorkeling and scuba diving daily, fell asleep in the sun on the (ever comfy) nets on the boat, made friends and created silly, goon-inspired games at night. i’m quite into the saying on the shirt we bought on the boat: “sooner or later, we’re all gonna DIVE.” word.

chapter four: fourth of july amped on speed and aussies

imagine marathon monday, christmas, your birthday, veteran’s day, and the fourth of july all rolled into one, and that, my friends, is australia’s ANZAC day. technically, it’s their veteran’s day equivalent…but it’s celebrated like nothing i have ever seen. i received a text from an australian dude at 10am informing me that he was already 8 beers deep. …and that was status quo. after dawn services (that i couldn’t muster the energy for at 530am), australia pours it down. and it lasts All. Day. Long. sunshine, booze, and service men everywhere you look. oh ANZAC. between drunk sailors and my friend who won serious money gambling that day, i spent a grand total of $0. at the risk of being repetitive, this country rules.

chapter five: the secret lives of hostel employees

for some reason that i will never understand (but always appreciate), the hostel staff in cairns decided to take us under their wings. when the staff are superlatively friendly, the hostel has its own bar, and you don’t know the city, this is like hitting a gold mine. besides showing us two insane days, they gave me a little peak into the more insane lives hostel staffers live. example: we played “never have i ever” with them. in a dozen rounds, i don’t think either of us put a single finger down. for more (entertaining but inappropriate) details, shout me a holla.

chapter six: fearless tour guide ends beerless tourists

our tour guide on fraser island (which in itself, ruled…fraser island=largest sand island in the world) was in a league of his own. He reminded me of the lovable, chubby sidekick from a popular sitcom. if you stalk my fbook and see this picture of ‘craig,’ please tell me what character he seems like. anyway, we went 4WD on the beach and this dude drove our bus over 4 foot rock faces! More than once we had a group of tourists surround the bus, audibly gasp, take pictures of us trying to scale rocks, and when we made it (as we always did), erupt with a load of clapping. craig also made us cookies, tea, and told jokes. he also poured his heart over beer (that he bought for EVERYONE) about how he was going to be a father. i told him he’s gonna be top notch. i miss craig everyday.

chapter seven: irish invasion tour 2k9

the world does not know a party until ireland, relocated to australia, shows them one. we met up with my roommate’s irish boy and, oh, 24 of his closest lads. and, to make matters more irish, we were at an irish pub. and to make matters more rowdy, the entire shindig was a going away party for one of said lads, thus, all in serious celebratory mode. the accent (which i fondly refer to as the ‘language barrier’ as it can be tough to understand!) is quite endearing. we made many of the lads count to five for us (“one, two, tree, four, five”). as a result of the irish invasion, i simply cannot wait to hit up ireland.

chapter eight:$2 steaks: "the best thing that ever happened to me"

i think i’ve already gushed about how i love steak night dearly. (on wednesdays, if you buy a $4 beer, you get a full steak for $2 and it’s all kinds of awesome). point being, i heard this same quote TWICE today from two different people. further proof of $2 steak’s power.

chapter nine: 1976: how we made friends in their thirties

let’s first spit the fact that within the last week i have advised two 30+ men on marital issues. add to that the fact that I receive texts from a 34 year old woman, who i might deem my coolest friend. add to these that, collectively, we’ve been added by at least a dozen 30+ers on facebook. if this sounds creepy, it isn’t. too long for one chapter. shout a holla for whole tale.

chapter ten: inked asses (and other poor decisions)

i walk by tattoo parlor. i wave as we’re (somehow) friends with dudes in there. “yo kase! come back! i got my ass tattooed” says my dude friend. i assume he’s lying. “oh yeah. what of?” “your name!” i laugh “right. see you later bud!” so i see him later. i ask, with a smile, how his ass is. “you don’t believe me?” “not at all.” in public, pulls down his pants. on one cheek, in cursive, ‘Your Name,’ on the other, the outline (traced with tattoo needle) of his friend’s HAND. i am floored. “DUDE! regrets?” “aw no girl! i’ve already made money on it! i keep betting people at the bar that i have their name tattooed on my ass, they don’t believe me, i moon them, they see i’m right, annnnd they buy me a beer. i’m already making profits. it’s been a good economic move.” Total Nonsense.

chapter eleven: failing australian school (and other false alarms)

i got back papers in my creative writing and health & healing classes. both had generally positive remarks. one was a 76, one was a 77. i think, “shit. this isn’t working out so well. i tried on that shit!” then i decide maybe it ought to check out an aussie-american grade conversion table. turns out anything above a 75 means A. viiictory!

chapter twelve: stranger than fiction: bizarre characters along the way

cherry sun and hong j.: eccentric lesbians who lived on the boat with us. lots of pda. obsessed with the film finding nemo. hong j. was very commonly cited taking pictures of cherry sun whilst she danced with a sarong or ribbon in the wind.

‘denmark’: real name: unknown. personality: unknown (due to lack of talking). age: 25? notable feature: never ever seen without his yo-yo.

‘sunshine’: real name: also unknown. only notable feature: never seen without his anti-sunshine umbrella, even in shade.

chapter thirteen: australia trusts us unconditionally?

mariah and i arrive at airport. we check in. they offer to change our seats to exit row (‘sup leg room?) and to move them together (‘sup friendship?). we happily accept. we go through security. we check in at gate. we board plane. we sit down, take off, and land five minutes early. never once in this entire process did they ask for ANY form of identification. and we took water bottles. WOW.

chapter fourteen: is that beer or pool water?: how to lose and win simultaneously

on break, we came across a bar with trivia night. we think, “we’re smart broads, we have a shot! maybe we’ll win and get the $100 bar tab prize!” we enter. after round one, we’re eating shit. after rounds two, three, and four, we’re in deeper shit. by the end, it is clear we have lost in a big, big way. what we were not aware of, however, was that last place team is “required” to jump in the pool next to the bar, either fully naked or clothed, in front of all. and, as compensation, the jumpers are given a free jug of beer. we hesitated for a hot second, i told mariah we had to do it, for story’s sake. we looked at each other, nodded, and ran into the pool (clothed) holding hands. it was a sight to be seen. i don’t remember the last time so many people clapped for me. we made a lot of friends that night. i call this quite the triumph.

chapter fifteen: glorious graffiti

on the walk to school everyday, i smile when i pass the block on which the following was written on wet (long since dry) cement: skate today, as tomorrow it may rain.

chapter sixteen: mooches and pooches

one of my friends here lives in a house with twelve people. she was recently complaining about this one dude she lives with who steals everyone’s food. i ask her if it’s a rare thing or if it’s actually a big deal. she tells me that he recently admitted to not having gone grocery shopping once since we’ve been here. i think this is hilarious/nuts. in the pooches aspect, i am falling in love with every dog in this country. after a bizarre turn of events last week, i wound up sleeping on a couch with a puppy. easily the best night/best face to wake up to.

chapter seventeen: passing on america's pastime: NYM in SYD

as you may or may not be aware, there is no major league baseball in this country. this is one of australia’s only faults. thankfully, one of my australian friends is both aware of my mets obsession and gets some serious cable annnnd recorded the mets/phillies game for me! best ever. better yet was watching it with a group of aussie dudes as they asked endearingly simple questions (as their games are cricket, afl, rugby, not american baseball). “hey kasey- how many innings in this?” “how many times do they get to bat?” “what does rbi stand for?” in this country, at least, i am guru of all things baseball.

chapter eighteen: freshie

we have a new roommate! long story, but bottom line: other roomie receives message from a girl from her freshman year dorm, girl is in sydney, girl is living in hostel, we have extra bed, we invite her to move in. all will be grand so long as housing doesn’t find out (that we are violating some serious contracts that we signed). but she cooks for us! and she’s friendly! these attributes? key. we call her freshie because she’s new to all the australian nonsense, culture, scene, slang, boys, etc. we are breaking her in gently. we are such wonderful (and humble) mentors.

chapter nineteen: upset middle-aged women sensitive to noise and joy

if our neighbor read chapter 18, she would turn us in. she doesn’t like us because we are not church mice. read: she has already logged formal noise complaints about us evennnn though we are ever-nice to her, quiet down the moment she asks, and still (abiding by rules) have not thrown a party here. thankfully the study abroad ladies like us and realize that our neighbor is more lonely than we are loud.

chapter twenty: zoom, zoom.

as in the mazda commercial, but also as in how terribly violently quickly TIME is zooming. more than halfway done. i don’t want any more sand to filter through the hour glass. buuuut it seems that even though i still don’t have a watch/clock/calendar/assignment book/any time organization, i cannot control time. so i just enjoy it.

in conclusion, i'm happy as a clam and plane tickets here are cheaper than they have ever been. read: come be happy with me

the end.

love,
kasey

Monday, April 20, 2009

COMING SOON!

i'm slacking and i apologize, but the grandest, most epic update that this blog/you have ever seen is coming soon. for now, let it suffice to say the following three things:

1. the last week (aka 12 days) of break were the most insanely glorious twelve days i have seen in a good while and i already live in paradise. the fact that i survived it all was icing on the (delicious) cake.

2. next time i write i won't be able to use "i'm not 21" as reasoning for feigned sobriety.

3. i love you

the end.

love,
kasey

Monday, March 30, 2009

"flatm8z fo lyfe"

I still giggle inside when an Australian asks me, “how you going?” meaning, “how are you?” I am always tempted to respond with, “by foot” or “via plane,” but I’m not a tool and I think the “how you going?” is endearing and should be encouraged.

You know what else should be encouraged? Barbies. As in delicious food on a grill, not a disproportioned doll. The stereotype of Australian barbies are wrong—they’re better. Imagine a glorious park next to an equally glorious beach entirely occupied by happy Aussies. Every single one is drinking beer (‘no booze in public’ laws are overlooked for Sunday barbies). Sausage, steak, beer battered bacon (surprisingly awesome (speaking of awesome, Australians are amused when we say it)), the works. Some dudes next to us were grilling kangaroo, but since I had pet a kangaroo within the last 24 hours, I stuck with non-kanga meat. This particular barbie was particularly amusing as my friend and I were in the minority (females, without full sleeve tattoos, etc.) and also because I shared a kabob (pronounced ka-bAb) with Nicole Kidman’s bodyguard. Top ten most entertaining nights of life, easy.

I don’t wear a watch or have a calendar here. I have, literally and more than once, told time by a sundial. Normally I tell time by how crowded street cafés are, how dark it is, or if there are still kids and puppies kickin’ around. It beats digital clocks and roman numerals.

We celebrated (as we, like this whole nation, take any excuse we find) our One Month of Australia Anniversary recently. That means that we have been here for a month. That is absolutely insane because my plane landed, oh, yesterday. Living in the future only makes the warped speed with which time is traveling even more intense.

Ever since I joined the Australia network on the book, I have gotten some bizarre friend requests from strangers on this island. But they all have silly Australian names (Dunstan, for instance) so I accept.

Speaking of things that make the world seem tiny (fbook), the small world-isms keep on rolling. In the middle of the woods in the Blue Mountains, I ran into a girl from high school I haven’t seen since graduation (we said “holy shit!” simultaneously). At a bar, a friend introduces me to his friend…except I already know his friend. We had freshman year Spanish together. And the creep LBI dude from the first night, who I assumed went to U. Sydney, who I assumed we would never see again…he sat behind me at orientation. Straight up nonsense.

A lesson in Australian speak, for all of you keeping score at home. If someone says to you, “Mate—you seem really pissed this arvo, do you think you could help me carry this esky filled with capsicum and not winge about it? Or maybe you should just SMS me when you get home? Ta.” If you were to hear that, and you never, ever would, the speaker means, “Dude, you’re drunk this afternoon. Help me carry this cooler full of peppers and please don’t complain about it. Or text message me when you get home. Bye.” End of lesson.

I will end with a bunch of top five lists, because I want to.

Things I miss:
1. George lord and his wonderfully fat cheeks
2. Pictionary tournaments in 424 (speaking of, I saw a metaphorical “lamp” girl carrying an ACTUAL game of Pictionary around campus yesterday. I laughed aloud.)
3. A meal plan
4. Wireless internet in my bed
5. YOU!

Things I don’t miss:
1. Boston weather
2. A world without kangaroos
3. Class five days a week
4. Being obligated to wear shoes
5. The smell of Edmond’s

Things we now have in our apartment that aren’t, technically, “ours:”
1. Eight neon shot glasses from unibar AND one wine glass from a classy restaurant
2. Two pairs of (new!) shoes left behind in rental car
3. More than 50 plastic sporks from garlo’s meat pies
4. A (very comfortable!) canvas director-ish chair we found on the street
5. Three posters advertising themed parties at bars

Five excerpts, out of context, from our running (100+) list of Why Australia Rules:
19. Drunk cop at Mardis Gras
29. Bondi Rescue
27. Uniforms with hats
33. "Simon(s)"
68. Three Mile Tuesday


1. I'm still pulling for all of you to fly down here...
2. and I swear it would be the best plane ticket of your life.
3. The end.
4. Love,
5. Kasey

Saturday, March 21, 2009

"are you wearing pants?"

They have no pennies in this country, and I think I like that. They also have meat pies, and I certainly like that. This island is rather like the wine we’ve been floating (not quite drowning) in—better and better with time. The longer I live here (still can’t believe that Kasey, Australia, and a stamp can exist on one envelope addressed to me), and it’s been a month, the more I discover. The other day a few of us went on a coastal walk (a 5K each way…I mention that distance for the benefit of a few certain people). Cliffs, waterfalls, insane panoramas, beaches, sandy puppies, flowers—glory. I wish pictures did it justice, but they don’t. I also wish I could carry all of you around in my pockets. That’d be entertaining anywhere, but in Australia your view would be top-notch.

Also, I am tweaking out—I have still not surfed. For future reference, dudes named “Surfer Stu” are not reliable with their schedules or phones. I’m tempted to buy my own board, but that would kill my funds and class attendance with one stone/board.

Contrary to popular belief, I have not died from starvation due to a lack of a meal plan. This could, in part, be related to the facts that “take-away” is mighty popular, they sell perfect frozen meat pies, or that one of my dear roommates loves to cook. Either way, I go to bed full at night.

Thing #154 I love about my life: I go to the beach nearly every day. I often stop in McDonalds (called Macca’s here!) and buy a 30 cent (?!) soft serve cone. And then I walk home from beach, along glorious Coogee Bay Road, ice cream cone in hand, and, of course, barefoot. Ain’t nothing finer.

Our neighbors across the hall are a loveable Aussie family. They have a baby girl named Matilda and I want to steal her. Thankfully, the neighbors are more of a Miss. Honey breed than Trunchbull.

Although, really, everyone here seems rather Miss. Honey-ish. They don’t call it the “lucky country” for nothing. In most magazines I’ve read here there are ads about how to extend your visa/cash in your old home for a sparkling new one in Oz. The dude who gives kayak tours lived in America…until he studied abroad at UNSW and decided to never go back. Another dude who spoke at orientation is from Minnesota, but came to study here…and now he only goes back to Minnesota for Christmas.

Other reasons I love UNSW include the fact that they arranged a St. Patrick’s day boat cruise. When’s the last time you saw 400 kids at sea, decked out in green, all with access to an open bar? Beautiful nonsense. Beautiful in that the view, from a boat, of the Sydney harbor at night is pretty awe-inspiring (pictures to come). Nonsense in that by the second hour, a drunk girl dropped her purse over the side of the boat. And when her (drunker) roommate heard the splash, she assumed the roommate fell in. I happily report that I, my friends, and my belongings all made it back to land. Great success.

My psychology of language TA is named Xerox Tang. As in copy machine brand name plus powdered orange drink. I’m not sure if it’s all right that I think this is entertaining.

Also-I finally booked spring break aka “mid semester break” because it’s not actually spring. We’re going to do an east coast Australia tour. It’ll be a combo of high class (glorious beach resort) and roughing it (sleeping on our 12 hour overnight bus). Adventure? I think so. We’ll be lounging on Fraser Island, sailing the Whitsunday islands, and then checking up on the Great Barrier Reef (‘sup world wonder?)! The trip (once you add in scuba at reef, white water rafting, jumping from plane) is going to cost way too much. YOLOB, though. I guess it’s just payback (literally) in awesomeness for all the jobs I’ve ever had. No better time to spend than during an economic recession while the exchange rate is bumpin, right?

In other adventure news, we went to the Blue Mountains yesterday and it was grand. Pictures don’t capture the wildly EPIC nature of them. We’re talking major vastness. I had another one of those “I’ve seen this visual in books/postcards/posters and now I am seeing it for real…woah” moments when we saw the Three Sisters (google image it up, if you’re curious). Also, my new job aspiration is to be the operator of the SkyRail at the Blue Mountains so I can just ride it all day long. Sweetest life ever. 

Even more exciting than mountains and rocks (no matter how importantly historical or grand) is the fact that I pet/cuddled with/loved up close kangaroos, wallabies, emus, and koalas. Facts: wombats are hysterical looking and I would like a pet dingo. If the SkyRail operator job is taken, I’ll just work at this wildlife park. Honestly though, I pet and handfed (and fell even more deeply in love with) kangas and koalas. I’m going to blow up the Kasey and Kangaroo picture and put it on the mantel on my next home. Not a joke.

Finally, if you’re ever having a sleepless night, you should probably get your ass out of bed and sign online. I often bum wifi in the afternoon here (late night of the previous day for those of you in my old hemisphere). Sign onto aim, talk to me in the future.

The end.

Love,
Kasey

PS- My local tattoo artist just invited me to a "barbie." Best life ever.

Saturday, March 14, 2009

"your american accents are so cool!"

Perhaps, since I am studying abroad, I might include a solid paragraph or two about my studies. I can only ramble about my newfound love for kangas, my eternal love of the ocean, or my fascination with things like flip-cup at orientation for so long.

In all honesty, although it’s more work than I had hoped for (read: wildly minimal), I am pretty into my classes. All teachers encourage us, in their ever-endearing accents, to call us by their first name. None of that “I didn’t go to school for 30 years for you to call me Andrew” nonsense. More like, “Please, call me Andy!” Points. Also, the ability to use profanity without consequence is not limited to Aussie ads or TV…it extends straight to the classroom. In my creative writing class the teacher talked about writing as a sexual metaphor…quite extensively and explicitly. No better way to get your point across.

My psychology of language teacher is this little, sprightly, British(ish?) dude (not unlike Sofer!) who happens to be a straight up genius. All of my teachers, actually, have cause to be arrogant monsters, but instead they’re chill as chill can be. In my marketing discussion, we had a go at speed dating, which was quite hilarious. I, lucky girl I am, had the chance to go on four “dates”…every single one was with a dude who, upon my asking what they did for fun, replied with a solemn, “computers” and nothing else. Beyond those four superstars though, the class is quite engaging and friendly.

Finally, I am head over heels for my “Health and Healing” class. I actually want it to be Thursday again just so I can be back in that room. Nothing defines it better than the following comment from a dude in my class (who was replying to the teacher’s “what do you expect from this class?”): “I hope this class stays this awesome. It feels like it’s one of those long, rambling, deep drunk conversations that you walk away from, thinking, WOW! And also, did that just HAPPEN? Please don’t take offense to that, I think it’s the best compliment I could give.” Teacher laughed and thanked him.

This time difference still baffles me mostly because, oh, I don’t know, I live in the FUTURE. What a bizarre thing to wrap your head around. If you’re ever curious about how the next fifteen hours of your life are gonna fly, email me and I’ll happily let you know. I have already lived them.

My new favorite day is Wednesday. There’s a place called the Beach Palace Hotel (it’s as ill as it sounds) that offers $2 steaks when you purchase a $4 beer, aka full meal and full drink for $6 aka wonderful. And when you take into account the 30% Australian “discount” due to how poorly (/awesomely for me) the Aussie buck is doing, that’s only $4.20! Such deals leave some leftover bills for more awesome things…like flights to New Zealand and fees for jumping out of planes.

In wave riding news, I have two surfing playdates! I think finding other pros (who have extra Kasey-sized boards) to surf with will be more efficient economically (buying a board ain’t cheap investment) and also will decrease my casualty odds (I don’t know these oceans, these rips, these sharks, etc… the pros do). One dude is a legit surf instructor, and I’m throwing him a few bills. One dude is a NZ native who wants no money, only a new face to ride waves with. Glorious.

KathyXcore would be proud of me: No sunburns. No diseases. I take a multi-vitamin and end up walking at least three miles daily. And I’m drinking an inhuman amount of water. These things serve as advanced apology note to my liver. Australians drink. I was ripping wifi from a bar on Sunday afternoon and by 4pm, the place was packed. Insane to the membrane. This country makes the Mods look like a place of peace.

In conclusion, if you all could start up some lemonade stands, start working street corners, sell your textbooks back early, what you do doesn’t matter, just make the bills and buy your plane tickets here. We have an extra bed, or, if preferred, I’m happy to share (dibs little spoon). But truly, I’m here until July. This offer is forever on the table and forever serious.

The end.

Love,

Kasey

Sunday, March 8, 2009

"in australia red means go"

i was tempted to make this entry only the following sentence: we played flip cup at orientation (and it ruled).

but in the interest of stories and details (and life in australia beyond school sponsored drinking games), i decided to make this a legit entry. orientation started as most do, boring, in a group, and inside. blah blah be safe, go to class, don’t get poisoned by creatures, don’t get roofied, blah, etc. annnd a few hours later, we’re outside at the campus bar and the dude that picked me up from the airport is ordering pitchers and moving patio tables to create an epically long flip cup table. welcome to higher education in the sunniest nation on earth. thinking of the impossibility of playing flip cup at BC’s orientation (at which FATHER leahy, our president, was present) makes me smile even more.

other smile inducers include all things related to mardis gras. yesteday in sydney was the lgbt pride/mardi gras/awesomeness/gayday parade. it was off the wall glorious. i have never seen so many dudes wearing so many wings (and so little other clothing) in my life. i actually heard the “aussie aussie aussie, oi oi oi!” cheer! it was one hell of a celebration…so much so that i felt a bit bummed to be run-of-the-mill hetero chick. insane pictures coming soon!

brief tale to prove the aussie wonder: we are walking home thursday night from a bar. i have an unstoppable craving for ice cream/popsicle type item (and getting those banana pops from lower isn’t an option). stop in a convenience store. bring supreme popsicle to counter. dude asks for 2.70. i tell him, ”i’m sorry, i only have $2” and i start to bring pop back to freezer. he stops me, says, “oh--no worries! enjoy it sweetheart!” and that i did.

i’m making admirable progress on my life goals list. getting to australia already checked one off. hang with kangas: check. nude beach: accidental check (did not expect naked bodies at our beach, but hey). immortalize myself by writing in wet cement: check (right outside my apartment in AUSTRALIA, no less). skydiving: uncheck, coming soon. scuba: uncheck, also coming soon. send a message in a bottle: in progress.

i like lists. here are some:

things i am in love with:
beach every single day
plenty of barefoot time
aussie accent (especially in small children)
meat pies
pure blonde beer
when australians say “heaps”
australian dogs*
kings of leon**
the sun setting not setting until 8pm 

*the dogs here are fantastic. they are everywhere and never, ever have leashes, yet, they are the most obedient pups in the world. they follow their owners attentively, wait outside stores for them, and follow complex instructions some KIDS might have trouble with (“bruno, go wait over there for a bit while i’m swimming!”) 

**in a timely fashion, i became obsessed right before i left. and here they are like gods, meaning every club plays sex on fire on heavy rotation.

things i am not in love with:
the metric system (it’s more logical, yes, but to me? nonsense)
wild spike in shark attacks (more attacks in the last month in sydney than in the last many years. let’s go surfing!)

things that still baffle me:
driver’s side on the right
people who enjoy vegemite

things i want from all of you:
your current addresses (if you want postcards! and you do want postcards)
suggestions of how i can watch 30-rock and 24 online
your promise to buy a plane ticket here before july
plenty’o’emails

 school starts tomorrow. i’ve been on vacation since LDOC of 2008. thus, i haven’t been in class for nearly three months. i’m not sure if i recall how to sit still. si se puede?

[edit: i wrote this yesterday, and am posting it today, thus i have already had class and have already survived sitting in a classroom and taking notes. great success!]

the end.

love,
kasey

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

corporate ausralia isn't real. take off your tie and shoes.

last summer i paid $25 for a panoramic photo poster of the view of the sydney harbor. i slapped it on the wall of home sweet edmond’s and fell asleep under that visual for a semester. last week, however, i paid $2 to hop on a bus that dropped me off in the same place my poster’s picture was taken. the moment the insanely glorious view was my own (to quote the great mastercard commercials): priceless.

but seriously. i sat with a friend at darling (and it’s called darling too, my god…) harbor struggling to drink an australian beer because my mouth was almost constantly agape as i gazed at the freaking sydney harbor bridge and opera house. what in the world did i do to deserve such awesomeness? beyond postcard-like views, i saw some pretty sick stuff, too. we’re talking a street performing dude who stood on a bike that was suspended in the air by a ten foot metal pole...and while up there he juggled a blowtorch and knives. ain’t no thing. also saw a forty-plus year old dude with dreds playing a didgeridoo, he was golden. i talked to a photographer at a market, was ever-impressed with his stuff. asked him to follow me around australia and take my pictures for me. he said he’d love to but warned me, with a laugh, that he was mighty expensive.

so far so good on the water, wine, and ocean resolutions. the only pitfall thus far: one blue bottle jellyfish sting (google image it!). it left this fierce warrior wound though and i’ve earned some street cred as i can say i’ve been stung by a portuguese man’o’war. no one had to pee on me, i felt better in an hour, and i‘m alive to write about it, so no worries. speaking of “no worries,” i thought i used that phrase a lot. it’s like these peoples’ comma. even the solicitors here are wildly friendly! exhibit A: “g’day want to buy these raffle tickets for some australian thing you’re not familiar with?” “no thanks.” “oh! no worries!” i bet even their dmv employees are nice. it’s simply that kind of nation down here.

i can’t decide whether i’m excited for classes to begin. on the plus, i’m a dork and am amped about the courses i’m taking. on the minus, having any form of a schedule might impede my do-whatever-i-want/that-usually-means-beach routine. from what i understand, though, classes here are of a much softer variety than BC’s. aka the sweet life will probably continue.

plans are in the works for some serious adventures. these ballin adventures include but are not limited to: white water rafting, blue mountains, climbing sydney harbor bridge, bungee jumping in new zealand, wine tasting in hunter valley, surf trips, sleeping in hammocks in fiji, checking up on the great barrier reef before global warming eats it, etc. sadly, these adventures cost some serious green (or serious pink, yellow, and blue as australian money goes). if you feel like wiring me thick stacks of bills, it would be wildly appreciated.

fun fact one: they filmed babe (of great pig fame) in australia!
fun fact two: i’ve heard “fuck” (and “root”!) on non-cable tv in australia.

in other entertaining news, there are some bizarre things that look exactly the same but carry different names. for instance, rice kripsies. same blue box, same snap, crackle, and pop dudes, but called rice bubbles. also, burger king. same logo, same food, but called hungry jack’s. these things make me laugh.

in most important news, i saw kangaroos and koalas. if i drop out of school and the dolphin training gig doesn’t pan out, i would happily settle for zoo-keeper at sydney wildlife world. any job that entails feeding kangas daily would be swell. they are quite friendly and intrigued with people (at least these kangas) which works out because i’m quite friendly and intrigued with them. when they jump, they look absolutely ridiculous. so, so silly that i laughed aloud. also, i had no idea that koalas make absurd noises! totally ridiculous, very loud, quite trainwreck-ish sounding. regardless, my koala love lives on.

i do miss all of your beautiful faces major league. once/if we land our own internet, i’ll be able to skype, which will be grand news. also, once i get my own internet i will be able to catch up and then keep up with all the personal emails. i swear i’m not failing on my gmail monster promise, i’ve just been unwired. SOON!

until then i will avoid further interactions with poisonous sea creatures…even though i was informed by a dear australian that i have a better chance of dying in a club than at the beach. i think that was supposed to be comforting.

the end.

love,
kasey

Thursday, February 26, 2009

a dingo ate your baby.

multiple times per day i find myself saying, to whomever I’m with, “oh my god. we live here.” this is usually sparked after an event such as seeing my toes while swimming in the pacific, eating breakfast outside among sounds of parakeets and swoon-worthy accents, or seeing a sydney postcard and realizing that it is not merely an insane panoramic picture—it’s my backyard.

therefore, my biggest fear is missing something. my aussie hit list of must-see places expands every time i talk to someone from around here. it seems there are must-see locals everywhere on this island. speaking of this being an island, the “long beach island everything is interconnected theory” holds true, once again. a boy i met on lbi years ago (who i almost didn’t remember) is apparently in sydney. the ‘apparently’ faded when he approached my friend and i in a bar on our first night with the most hilariously profane pick-up line i’ve ever heard. it’s a small world after all, over and over again.

back to important things, like my resolution to go in the pacific ocean blue every single day. exceptions will be made only for lightning storms or extreme weather advisories. i have also resolved to drink only two liquids: water and wine. exceptions made for cereal on milk and australian beer. so far, so awesome, but i’ll keep you posted on progress. cheer for me.

now, i would have said “root” for me there, but in this lovely country, “to root” is a sexual verb that is absolutely not related to cheering for a team or person. thus, the phrase “i was rooting for the whole boston college football team!” would be especially dangerous. other entertaining slang i’ve come across includes “woop woop,” the aussie equivalent of middle of nowhere/our “bumblefuck,” “bob’s your uncle,” meaning “there you have it!,” and “that’ll be apples,” meaning “it’ll be just fine.” on the flip side, australians are quite entertained with some of our words. however, when i say things like dickhouse, fooligan, or que ganga, i must explain that it’s really not a typical american deal.

no surfboard yet. sadly, the beach right by my apartment isn’t a surfing beach, so (once i own a grand ol’ board) i will join the hardcore dudes who take their boards on the bus. i’m getting antsy watching the waves without riding them, though i have four months to surf and tempt the sharks. patience, patience, patience.

this country is a particularly good teacher of patience, actually. everything here moves slower in the most beautiful of ways. you wait twenty minutes to get a restaurant bill, you drive slower (side note on driving: the left side of the road thing is going to land me on the hood of a car soon), you talk slower. and then there’s the whole relaxation and living your life thing that they’re so keen on. for instance, i was at the beach today, relaxing, and i know why i’m relaxing (i’m on a four month vacation and my life’s a joke) but why was everyone else there?! 2pm on a thursday, and the whole world was at the beach. people here work a whole lot less and view americans, rightly so, as living to work whereas they work just a means to live their life exactly how they want to. if possible, this makes me want a job even less.

most importantly, i’m going to the zoo on saturday. thus, next time i report the whole entry will, no doubt, be consumed with my kangaroo infatuation. be ready.

the end.

love,

kasey

Sunday, February 22, 2009

touchdown!

i am here, i am in one piece--double success! it's perfectly sunny, perfectly warm, i don't start classes for two weeks, and the pacific ocean is five minute walk from my front door. this negates everything else i could complain about (being wasted from jet lag, namely).

i promise a real update soon (when i'm not paying by the minute). just wanted to confirm my status as alive.

the end/just the beginning.

love,
kasey

Thursday, February 19, 2009

top notch advice

two days until i cruise ten thousand miles in the sky. i'm leaving on a saturday, arriving on a monday, and am in the air for one day. this baffles me beyond belief. the international dateline is a major headfuck! i'm not into losing a day while airborne. i am, however, into the fact that i'm flying in the same type of the plane they used for snakes on a plane (see: best film of life).

in other australian news, i have received some priceless advice for my journey. lovely folks from the ages of four to old fogey have dished some wise words that are worth sharing:

my new (but ancient) librarian friend: "some decades ago I lived there with my husband and three dogs. those were the best years of my life. go there and have the time of your life!" check.

jacqueline p. sullivan (verbatim): "the point is that you'll go to sydney and buy a large taxidermied kangaroo for our mod next year." attempt to check.

jps, part II (also verbatim): "go have fun in australia but don't get pregnant. but if you do, mail it to me." uncheck.

george lord: "don't go. it's too far. we won't be able to play and i won't be able to see you with my telescope." uncheck, but buy him better telescope.

my mom: "seriously, though. no magical thinking. if they say there are sharks, believe them and please surf elsewhere. i'd prefer for you to come home in one piece." hopeful check.


my mom's crazy friend: "aw kase, you go there! go love everyone! just don't fall in love with and marry an aborigine. your dad wouldn't be thrilled." check?


if you have any advice in the same league as the above, please let me know.

next time i post, i'll be ten thousand miles away, sixteen hours in the future, and one hundred percent wearing flops.

peace, america.

love,
kasey

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

priorities.


checklist:

-choose sunshine and ocean themed colors for blog: done
-also include picture of a glorious kangaroo: done
-google kangaroos (and learn that they can't move backwards): done
-email a dude about buying a surfboard: done
-find a place to live a half mile from beach: done
-check sydney forecast on weather.com when the fierce cold bums me out: done
-pick awesomely intriguing courses (that will be worth missing waves for): done
-have a mysterious angel create a class schedule for me that (magically) includes 3 day weekends: done
-make friends at bank, land some of the best looking currency i've ever seen: done
-begin to pack, or seriously consider packing, for the journey of the century: entirely undone

time until blastoff: nine days.
the ocean i hung out by today: atlantic
the ocean i'll hang out by ever so soon: pacific
how excited i am on a scale of one to extremely: extremely

the end.

love,
kasey