The Traveling Teacher

ramblings of an adventurer. teacher. traveler. writer. photographer. singer. webmaster. bibliophile. fangirl.

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Jun 25, 2009

European Vacation Part 1: Airport Adventures

SANY2137As much as I love to travel, I hate the actual traveling process. Airports are often the source of many tears for me, and this time was certainly no exception. When I left Bangkok on Friday night, I was only looking forward to meeting my parents in Barcelona and starting our cruise. By Saturday night, I just wanted to make it out of the airport with my sanity.

I was traveling with my friend Helen, but unfortunately we were on different airlines. We had agreed to meet in baggage claim in the Barcelona airport before heading to our hotel together, where we would meet my parents. It seemed like a simple enough plan, but I should have known better. My first flight was delayed, and I spent over an hour sleeping on the freezing cold tile floor of the Bangkok airport.

By the time we arrived at London Heathrow (which is definitely on my list of worst airports ever) I was cranky and tired, which only added to the fact that my bags had not been checked all the way through to Barcelona (my travel agent booked two separate tickets, don’t ask me why), so I had a fragment of time to run to baggage claim, get my bags, speed through customs, find the airline counter (which was, of course, in a different terminal), check in again, and run to my connecting flight. Normally I’m an airport-running expert, but this time I was caught at the Iberia Airlines desk when the handsome young Spaniard behind counter told me that since I was not technically on a connecting flight, my bags weighed too much and I couldn’t take them. Faced with the prospect of missing my flight (and possibly my cruise ship), I naturally burst into tears, which is just what I do when I am angry or upset (and in this case I was both). Luckily for me, this terrified the airline representative and he frantically got on the phone and talked to someone in charge, who graciously allowed my excess baggage in just enough time for me to catch my flight to Barcelona.

Normally one bout of tears is my standard fare for airport travel, but then I arrived in Barcelona and it all went downhill. My flight arrived behind schedule because of problems on the tarmac, and Helen had been waiting for me in baggage claim for over 4 hours at this point, so I was already in a bit of a tizzy by the time I got into the terminal. After waiting forever for my bags and not seeing Helen anywhere around, I went out into the main terminal to search. An hour of walking up and down the terminal, but no Helen. I was, of course, totally freaking out that I had lost her. I finally went to an information desk and asked about her flight… and was told that it had come in at a completely different terminal. I pushed my baggage cart down to the next terminal and proceeded to wander up and down that terminal for another hour… no Helen.

After calling the hotel to see if she had checked in without me (she hadn’t), I was in a full-blown panic. In utter desperation, I went up to an airport worker who wasa standing outside that terminal’s baggage claim and begged him to go in and just see if Helen was inside waiting for me. Apparently he had just taken his daily dose of rudeness pills, and he basically told me to bug off and just suck it up and wait. Which, of course, set me off into another round of tears. I sat on my baggage cart and cried for a good 20 minutes before deciding to give the terminal one last walk-through… and there was Helen, who was also crying after having waited for me for over 5 hours in a cold, unwelcoming airport. Needless to say, we went straight to the hotel and fell asleep.

The only good part of the “adventure”? Seeing Ethan Suplee at baggage claim (who was apparently having his own European family vacation) and secretly wishing I was brave enough to ask for an autograph.

Joy Pictures, Travel 640http%3A%2F%2Fwww.thetravelingteacher.org%2F2009%2F06%2F25%2Feuropean-vacation-part-1-airports-and-cruise-ships%2FEuropean+Vacation+Part+1%3A+Airport+Adventures2009-06-24+22%3A10%3A24Joyhttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.thetravelingteacher.org%2F%3Fp%3D64

Apr 22, 2009

Glad we cleared that up

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Joy Pictures, Travel 550http%3A%2F%2Fwww.thetravelingteacher.org%2F2009%2F04%2F22%2Fglad-we-cleared-that-up%2FGlad+we+cleared+that+up2009-04-22+14%3A11%3A08Joyhttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.thetravelingteacher.org%2F%3Fp%3D55

Apr 6, 2009

Follow the river and you will find the sea

SANY1481

Last weekend we went to Kanchanaburi, location of the famous River Kwai (which is also a bad word in Thai, or so I’ve been told). In spite of the fact that I was surrounded by nature for two days (I am not a fan of bugs crawling down my shirt anytime they like), it really was a lovely break from the concrete jungle of Bangkok and the boiling pot of stress my life has been lately.

During our two-days of bugs and beauty, we climbed up to some beautiful waterfalls, went to a spa in the hot springs, and even rafted down the River Kwai like Huckleberry Finn – once I realized we weren’t going to sink and drown, it was actually fun! I even enjoyed the camping aspect of our trip, mostly because our tent was air-conditioned. (What can I say? I’m a city girl at heart.)  Plus, a weekend hanging out with my favorite people is never a bad thing.

Joy Pictures, Travel 440http%3A%2F%2Fwww.thetravelingteacher.org%2F2009%2F04%2F06%2Ffollow-the-river-and-you-will-find-the-sea%2FFollow+the+river+and+you+will+find+the+sea2009-04-06+08%3A53%3A28Joyhttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.thetravelingteacher.org%2F%3Fp%3D44

Mar 21, 2009

This Is Thailand

T.I.T.One of the first things you learn when you come to Bangkok is the always-appropriate phrase “T.I.T” – This Is Thailand. This encompasses all manner of experiences: elephants walking along a busy highway, five people piled onto a tiny motorbike, little old ladies cutting in front of you in line even if you’ve been waiting for an hour… there’s an odd mixture of charm and frustration in this city, no matter who you are or where you come from. Some experiences are worse than others (as I discovered when I spent two months trying to get internet in my apartment), and some are just plain amusing.

Today fits more into the amusing category, thankfully. I spent the morning judging a debate competition for the World Scholar’s Cup that was being held at our school, then I ran a few errands, paid some bills – nothing too out of the ordinary. When I got back to my apartment, arms full of grocery bags, and went to put the key in the lock, I swung around and one of my bags stuck to the door. Obviously this made me do a double-take – usually things bounce off my door instead of stick to it…

Apparently someone painted my door during the few hours I was away from home. My entire apartment now smells like paint, and I’m left wondering who the drive-by painter in my building is.

T.I.T. indeed.

Joy Pictures, Ramblings, Travel 300http%3A%2F%2Fwww.thetravelingteacher.org%2F2009%2F03%2F21%2Fthis-is-thailand%2FThis+Is+Thailand2009-03-21+12%3A36%3A34Joyhttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.thetravelingteacher.org%2F%3Fp%3D30

Mar 20, 2009

London Calling

agelesslondonOn days like today I find myself missing London. There’s something about it that’s just magical, it draws you in. Maybe it’s because I’m part English myself, or maybe it’s because I thrive on culture, or maybe just because I love tea and theatre… whatever it is, London – no matter how much or how little time one spends there – feels like home.

Can you really call it homesickness if you’ve never actually lived in a place? Honestly, I feel like I lived there during my two-week holiday, crammed into tiny hotel rooms, buying extra sweaters just to keep warm, but I suppose technically I have no claim on London. However; I feel homesick for London as keenly as I feel homesick for my family. I miss riding the tube, I miss the terrifyingly enormous pigeons (Seriously, what is it about London’s pigeons? Who is feeding them fertilizer?), I miss the little bagel shop in Leicester Square with the Italian guy who called me “love” and toasted the bagels just the way I like them.

I’ll be back, London, don’t you worry. And this time I’m staying.

Joy Pictures, Travel 2491http%3A%2F%2Fwww.thetravelingteacher.org%2F2009%2F03%2F20%2Flondon-calling%2FLondon+Calling2009-03-20+11%3A33%3A19Joyhttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.thetravelingteacher.org%2F%3Fp%3D3

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