Culturally Astray

Entries categorized as ‘United States’

Yes, hello world indeed!

August 27, 2008 · 2 Comments

That’s quite right, WordPress! Because I, Jon, am going to become a world traveler in just 21 days! And yes, I did decide to change my blog over to WordPress and alter the title just a few days after first starting it. I have never had a blog before and I wasn’t sure how the services worked. At first I went with Blogger because it is so widely used and well known, but in the end I didn’t care much for the way it went about displaying comments and such. So, you will find my blog here from now on and the other will be deleted before I leave the country. And I must say, I love WordPress already! It’s much-swank!

On a side note, it has been recommended by some that I make a blog entry detailing the events surrounding the great “Packing of the Suitcase.” To be quite honest, meh, I don’t like to do what everyone else is doing. Now, I do look forward to seeing these posts from those others of you that will be doing them (pictures included guys!). Of course at the moment I have absolutely no intention of doing that. I’ll figure something out to replace it though. And if I don’t I’ll just do what everyone else is. Can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em!

Writing from Fayetteville, NC | August 27, 2008

Categories: Fayetteville
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Not Finding Dreamland – New Blog, First Post!

August 24, 2008 · 3 Comments

Nope. But I’ve found blogging early this Sunday morning. Here it is 5 a.m. and I’m still unable to sleep so I decided to get one of the “things I need to do” done in hopes of relieving my mind of whatever thoughts might be keeping me awake.

And here I am blogging. The first post of my first blog. The blog intended to carry me through Japan and beyond. My travel blog. (Perhaps too many occurrences of the same word in so few lines. I’ll lighten up.) Nonetheless, what on earth makes such an event so important that it ought to have been done at any other time? Any other time could have been more important than sleepless 5 a.m.! Right now though I feel no time could be better.

So, shortly, let’s get the general dirt out of the way. You all know by now that I’m going to Japan. (You didn’t? Well now you do.) And that’s exactly right. No, really. No bull-crap. I’m leaving on September 17th for Tokyo where I will spend the next year of my life and you can read about it all right here! I’m going to make an attempt, not a promise, to post here no less than once a week. Whether it’s a weekly update of what’s goin’ on or just a short bit about my fascination with the way a door opens or the way toilets are built into floors (the latter with much less detail). You all can leave comments of strong approval and/or snide ridicule whenever you so desire.

As for while I’m in Japan, I do plan to travel extensively throughout the country as well as outside of the country. And I’ll have plenty of pictures to share and will include at least one picture with every post I publish.

So that’s the gist of it. Now I have just a simple request for those of you reading the blog. If I don’t already have them I would like to get your e-mail and home address. I don’t want to lose contact while abroad!

That said, let’s stay in touch guys! Take care, enjoy your year and keep reading for fantastic, adventurous new entries in the Jon is Traveling Astray saga!

Writing from Fayetteville, NC | August 24, 2008

Categories: Fayetteville
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California Glimpse

July 15, 2008 · 2 Comments

Lubbock, TX to Casa Grande, AZ to Los Angeles, CA to Monterey, CA to Rohnert Park, CA to Eureka, CA to Lincoln City, OR to Mt. Saint Helens to Portland, OR

July 5th~11th, 2008

This is the essay I submitted for the National Geographic Glimpse application due July 14th, 2008. Even though I was not accepted to the program I’m very satisfied with it. Hope everyone enjoys!

California. Known to many as the most liberal state in the U.S. The land of renewables, recycling and wind energy. And the land of the hybrid or fuel cell vehicle. The land of expensive and beautiful cars, houses, and stars. And to some the land of the strange and socially inept. However you look at it, the west coast is a land of wonder to those of us living outside of its bonds.

Over the course of just the past week I have had the opportunity to experience for the first time a minimal, generalized portion of the state of California and the west coast of the United States. The journey, while being somewhat overwhelming for a newcomer, has been truly thoroughly enlightening. I have traveled over twenty-five hundred miles by car of mostly scenic routes from northwest Texas to Portland, Oregon via California. The trip was completed in about six days which were spent sightseeing in a few key cities and along most of California’s Scenic Highway One with nights spent in various town and cities from small to huge along the route. (We favored Best Western it seems…)

For me, California has long been a land of my dreams. A place I always wanted to visit and even live in; a place where the mind feels liberated and the spirit free. From an age younger than made me capable of comprehending such a sudden action as moving to the opposite side of the country, I lived from day to day wanting to do just that. And for just that reason it can be seen why California existed as a fantastic dream land in my young mind.

Upon crossing the border from Arizona to California, without even experiencing any significant sights or indication that the place was indeed someplace new, my spirit soared and I became light at heart for whatever internal reason. In fact the same desert-like scenery rolled past for many more miles. The flat plains of Arizona had simply turned into rock-strewn, treeless rolling hills in SoCal. This scenery also led us through our first California sight: Joshua Tree National Park. This was so close to what I was already used to seeing in Arizona that I still now have trouble disassociating the two.

Eventually I had reached my destination for the night in one of America’s largest cities, as you may have expected, Los Angeles. This came just came just after driving through fields of huge wind turbines intended to power most of southern California in the future. In LA I stayed for the night after hanging with an old friend and checking out the sights to behold around part of downtown and Hollywood. As soon as I saw Los Angeles I was practically blown away and surprised most of all to find that it was built on top of a mountain range (as it turns out everything else in California is). I had expected a sea-side metropolis on at least as flat of land as New York City is. From there it was north along some country-side routes giving vast views of extensive valleys and high, rolling hills which left me speechless. And eventually along Scenic Highway One where I (and my camera) captured my first glimpse of the Pacific Ocean. The first time in my life. And I was just awe-struck. The highway winded in and out along steep mountainside cliffs that made me a bit nervous and sick. The sand down at the ocean’s edge was thick and dark in color when there weren’t just towering, monumental rock structures jutting up out of the water. Fog and mist hung low over the horizon and added to the picturesque and moving view.

The next night was in Monterey after being diverted through back-woods roads around wildfires that left a smoky smell in the air. Monterey and Santa Cruz both got us turned around but only to experience more different sights such as the colorful streets and the people and all of the bicycles and cycling, which greatly drew my fascinated attention. More scenic views took me to San Francisco where I ate at the Fisherman’s Wharf and took pictures while my father drove the car down Lombard Street’s steep winding corridor. Then I got my first view of the Golden Gate bridge, snapping plenty of photos along the way.

The next two days brought me through more scenic highways and past a number of redwoods, one of which we could even drive through. This, again, was quite the breathtaking experience. I felt as if I was standing in a forest in which I did not belong and only prehistoric creatures were free to roam. I kept a sharp eye on the far dark reaches of the woods just in case a Rex might be lurking around the corner of one of those massive giants waiting to eat me. Nonetheless it was also a captivating experience.

In the end I may not have known I left California and entered Oregon if not for the sign telling me so or the coastline becoming somewhat less scenic. (I guess the gas prices being lower factored into it too.) And at that note I realized something. Something that, sure, plenty of us already acknowledge. And certainly I knew well about it too having taken a number of courses focused on culture and globalization. You see, nature knows no boundaries. Just like the people of this world. And nature should be the best indicator that boundaries simply do not exist. The Saguaro cacti, though we found them centrally focused around Tucson, scatter even north of Phoenix and probably south deep into Mexico. The rocky desert hills continued from Arizona into California and the redwoods continue growing into Oregon. The mountain ranges flowed, though getting smaller, throughout California and the cliffs stayed sheer even along Oregon’s coast. And by just the middle of this long trip I realize I have experienced so much variety in one week that I am simply speechless in awe at almost everything. It is hard to fathom that here I am in Portland, yet another new place for me, writing this and I am simply so overwhelmed that the best way I can show my fascination and contentment is to be quietly awestruck by the beauty and variety of this place.

I have forgotten by this point in my life what I thought was so great about California for so many years that drew me to wanting to be here. What ever it may have been, I think it certainly couldn’t match up in proportional scale to what I have found. From rocky deserts with cacti to wind farm fields, from crowded highways and confusing city streets to scenic cliffs and mountain ranges with cities perched atop, and from cultured coastal towns through deep fertile valleys to towering prehistoric-sized trees somewhere along the way I was made aware of the experience of a lifetime that was years overdue.

signedhighway

Writing from Portland, Oregon | July 15, 2008

Categories: California
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Growing Accustomed to Boredom; Tired of Stagnating

July 2, 2008 · 1 Comment

Lubbock, TX – June 8th~21st, 2008

Rave on the Radio in my Ride

On Friday of my second week here I discovered the most amazing radio station ever. Well, I knew about it for awhile but finally decided to turn it on at about 9:30 one night while driving back from some shopping. And on Friday nights they do a line-up of trance for a segment called Fusion. First time I’ve ever heard REAL trance/techno radio.

The station is called KTXT and is run entirely by Texas Tech. It plays a lot more than just trance and a lot of music you won’t hear anywhere else, though at times that can be its downfall. Especially during grunge and line-ups. Still, check out the live stream online sometime.

Father’s Day Weekend

It was a pretty busy weekend. Went bowling, played pool (he kicked my ass, obviously), ate out for lunch and dinner at some pretty spiff places, and went to see The Happening all in one day. Also, we finally put the motorcycle in the shop. And on Sunday I got to help cook a real meal for the first time since I arrived.

notomatoes

When it rains, it POURS!

So I had been here all of two weeks without a single drop of rain and the giant thunderhead clouds teasing me as they skirt the horizon passing just outside the city. And finally something happened. Took it two and a half weeks but the rain finally came.

I’ve heard that when it rains here it pours. And this is evidenced by the wide, deep and long drainways that I thought only showed up in populated European and Asian cities. So, getting back to the point here, the sky basically exploded. Dust rolled in at the front with the 30mph winds, clouds the size of skyscrapers scraped the sky, and the lightning was huge, bright and nonstop followed constantly by thunder that shook the house so hard things fell off shelves.

In the end the electricity never even went out during a storm that would have totaled a place like Fayetteville. After this one, the crazy thunderstorms have been pretty steady. The second even included some golf ball sized hail.

hail

Then the Great Cow in the sky said “Let their be one among us.” There was and the taste was good. (Heifer 3:16)

Many of you may or may not have had the chance to hear me mention one of the best eating experiences made available to a college campus. It’s called Cowamongus, where you can get a top-shelf sirloin cut fresh off of one of Texas Tech’s very own hand raised cows sold for the same price as low-rate Chinese food from UNC Charlotte. What can I say, Texas makes things more delicious too.

cowamongus

In a nutshell:

Been spending most of my time taking pictures, trying to be artsy-n-craftsy, studying Japanese, organizing my father’s things, and reading On The Road.

I finally bought an external hard drive for backing up my photos, got a two-week membership at the recreation center, and jogged a 5k in 29 minutes 40 seconds. I even got a free t-shirt. And lucky me I dropped my cell phone the day after it rained and the thing landed right in a puddle. Didn’t work gain until the next day.

glove

Most significant experience:

Wednesday, June 18th. I climbed on the motorcycle and felt the vibrations from the idling engine through the seat. Already a moment I hadn’t ever had the chance to experience on my own. I picked my right foot up and pressed it on the foot break. The engine was already in first gear with my left hand squeezed firmly on the clutch. I slowly released it as I lifted my left foot off the ground and my right foot off the brake – the bike rolled forward. The engine sputtered and the bike stopped suddenly, stalling as I bounced forward off the seat landing back down just quickly enough to rebalance. Hey, not everything in life comes on the first try!

bike1

Writing from Lubbock, Texas | July 2, 2008

Categories: Lubbock
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Under the Hot Sun; In the Dry Air

June 9, 2008 · 1 Comment

Lubbock, TX – June 1st~7th, 2008

I hate Texas. It’s hot!

Apparently, it just so happens that this week we’re at record high temperatures for Texas at this time. Whereas on the east coast heat is humid, here it isn’t. Of course this is no big relief. The wind blows but it just blows hot, dry air around. It isn’t a Godsend like the breeze of North Carolina in the humid afternoon.

Heat here is strangely tolerable though. It takes approximately two days to get used to. The sun itself weighs heavy on your back. When it says 104 degrees it IS 104 degrees. There’s none of this “feels like” crap. No humidity bogs you down. When you go inside relief is instant. No waiting around for the moisture caked onto your body to dry up – there is none. And with the average AC temp at about 75 to 80 it feels like the southwest’s Godsend answer to the over 100 temperature outside.

I’m staff and a student.

Not really though. As staff I’m currently working on a new web project involving a great deal of my very own photography. It’s a secret. I’d have to kill you. With this project I will be using Adobe Photoshop and Dreamweaver CS3. So I decided to register for a few free Photoshop courses offered at Tech, something I wish they’d offer at UNCC. So I figure that’s enough to call me a student. Now all I’m waiting for is that student/staff I.D. It’s supposed to come with a bunch of perks.

Bicycles, parking lots, and White Rabbit candies.

Bikes, bikes, bikes, BIKES! They’re everywhere. Seems like everybody rides one. Even the girls do. Which is the biggest surprise. The campus sports its own mostly free of charge bike shop called BikeTech. And at the Rec Center you can rent a bike for free for up to three days with a student I.D. But this is all no surprise considering Texas Tech is the largest campus in the US. As you can imagine seeing all this bicycle related stuff has got me really wanting to go for a ride. And there are tons of abandoned bikes leftover from spring semester just waiting for me to take one.

A bike tagged for removal.

A bike tagged for removal.

Tech is covered with black-top parking lots. It’s like they see a field and can’t think of anything to put in it so instead of leaving it the hell alone they pave it. Turn it into a desert on steroids which I have to walk across while I’m shooting photos. Not many parking decks here either. Just one on the whole campus.

The numbers even went over 1000 outside of the football stadium.

The numbers even went over 1000 outside of the football stadium.

Dad’s fiancee got me three bags of White Rabbit candy thinking it was Japanese. I like it enough still. So it has pretty thoroughly permeated my past few days. All 120 of them. And I still have a pile of ‘em. Now I’m folding the wrappers into the fun fruits of boredom. Just a thought.

The country goes green! West Texas stays a depressing shade of brown…

For this whole week it hasn’t rained once. The sky has been clear and mostly void of clouds daily. And wind blows constantly. In the afternoon the wind kicks up a dust cloud that literally enshrouds the whole city even blocking out the sun and making the air cooler. Of course then you have to deal with sand blowing in your eyes at 30mph. Which sucks.

For the weekend:

Friday my dad and I got the motorcycle running. Soon we’ll get the carburetor cleaned so it will run perfectly. Saturday and Sunday my dad and his fiancee are in D.C. while I’m watching four dogs and a cat. Spending my free time online, walking to K-Mart for food, experimenting with Photoshop, studying Japanese, watching TV, playing DDR, reading a few books, and really loving Taxicab Confessions.

Most significant experience this week:

Friday. Any of you ever been on one of those catwalks you see suspended way up in the rafters of the giant 15,000 seat auditoriums? I have. One of the perks of being a photographer… I hate heights! Once we got outside on the roof it was one of the best views of the whole city.

Afterwards, while taking pictures in the opposite direction through the windows of the new law building, I enjoyed the company and conversation of a small girl two years my senior with an equally small voice and a contrastingly Texas-sized spirit. As I photographed the Spirit Arena whose roof I had stood on only half an hour before…

A picturesque view from the study room windows closes the day, and the week, on a good note.

A picturesque view from the study room windows closes the day, and the week, on a good note.

Writing from Lubbock, Texas | June 9, 2008

Categories: Lubbock
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