~ sea-ville ~

09 May 2007

happy birthday to me

last night at open mike, one of the students, Ryan, told a story about Hawaii that I had also experienced. Everywhere else we’ve been, when you get off the ship and you run into a group of American students, they belong to us. Likely half of them are wearing Semester at Sea attire, but even without that, they are highly recognizable as being one of us. As we were walking around Hawaii and I’d see clusters of students, I kept thinking them to be from SAS until it struck me as odd that I didn’t really recognize a single one of them. And then I remembered/realized there are many other groups of American students here! They are not all us …

After open mike, the deans threw an end-of-voyage-party. I told Miriam that she was the life-long-learner I was going to miss most. And she got all teary, I nearly made her cry! I’m not sure that I’ve blogged about Miriam. I like her a lot. She has biting humor. She is very sarcastic and she makes me laugh. She’s another one who always says exactly what everyone else is thinking. During our first conversation, we were on a small boat back to the ship from Itaparica Island in Brazil and I asked her about her family. She said very calmly and sweetly that she had four children and a myriad of grandchildren and that, after this voyage, she would be having a birthday-of-note and that they had better all show up, goddamnit. She says everything so conversationally all in the same tone of voice, so you don’t see it coming. I enjoy Miriam.

This morning was crazy in the library. Yesterday was study-day A and, although I was there to open at 8:00, I don’t think there was a single user until about 11:00. Everyone slept in. Judyie said that she felt like she kept saying hello to the same six people over and over, that only 6 people must be awake on this whole ship. But, today (exam-day A), the dining hall was packed at 7:45, there was business looking for me at breakfast at 7:59 and it never stopped. Faculty in last minute panic about printing out exams, students grumbling over the fact our stapler is broken *again*, our printer was out of toner and then replaced but still not working, and lots of books being returned and lots of books still being checked out. And things coming off reserve. And I’m trying to get rid of those last videos that still need attention ... and still working on documentation … We got a few volunteers in the library this afternoon, since we’ve cut back on workstudy hours so that the students can study. The students are mostly working evenings. Kate and Shannon helped us shelve and (un)process reserves and that was very helpful. When I told Erika that we had volunteers, her response was "but how will they know what to do?" ... it made me smile that the workstudy students have clearly taken responsibility for the library!

And then tonight our extended family had a pizza party. I took some family photos:

Victor, Katie, Mary:

Erika, Ryan:

Andrea, Amanda:

Jennifer, in her beautiful midnight blue saree, which she modeled for me:

My whole family, back row: Jennifer, Victor, Ryan, Michael, Mary, Andrea; front row: Erika, Katie, Amanda.


At the end, we played Apples to Apples, which thanks to Rich & Laura has traveled all the way around the world. And then there was a birthday cake! Before I became part of Mary & Michael's extended family, they had scheduled everybody’s birthdays and “invented” birthdays for the students whose real birthdays didn’t occur during the voyage. I missed the original scheduling and my birthday is in November, so it would have had to have been invented anyway, but tonight after the party a cake arrived! And Mary gave me a little bag she made. Andrea made me a card -- Aunt Erin. It was very sweet and I was very surprised. And it made me teary and almost made me cry. Everybody is pretty much on the verge of tears around here. At the party tonight, Katie said that she’s never felt such conflicting strong emotions before: so sad to be leaving the ship and, simultaneously, very happy to be going home. We’re all in that space right now. 4 days left.

08 May 2007

ice cream & thank-you’s

Ron, our Assistant Dean, hosted an ice-cream party this evening for all the workstudy students on the voyage. It was also barbecue night, it was one of those nights where I’ve eaten so much I feel like I will never need to eat again … I’ve been polling my workstudy students the last couple of days on a few different questions:

Ericka

  • Notable fact: She throws all spelling-assumptions to the wind. No, I didn't misspell her name, it has both a "c" and a "k" -- Ericka.
  • What will you miss most? Friends.
  • What are you looking most forward to about going home? My other friends. [Actually, the other day, she told me it was Taco Bell, but when I asked her formally, she said this instead ...]
  • When we were sitting in the piano bar at the beginning of the voyage -- workstudy students getting assignments and meeting their supervisors -- and you learned that you would be working in the library, what was the first thing that crossed your mind? That’s the job I wanted.
  • What was the best part of working about the library? Getting to meet people.
  • Would you recommend Semester at Sea? Definitely!

Lindsay

  • Notable fact: Lindsay shaved her head for Neptune Day but didn’t tell any of her friends or family until her parents came to Vietnam for the Parent Trip. They found out when they watched her come off the gangway. Lindsay had a long post on her blog after Neptune Day talking about all the people who shaved their heads, but neglected to mention that she had done so also. Before Neptune Day, she had long-long blond hair all the way down her back.
  • What will you miss most? The change and sense of adventure and chaos.
  • What are you looking most forward to about going home? Good food. What I want and when I want.
  • When we were sitting in the piano bar ... and you learned that you would be working in the library, what was the first thing that crossed your mind? hmmm, I wanted to work in the Administrative office.
  • What was the best part about working in the library? Meeting people I wouldn’t have met otherwise.
  • Would you recommend Semester at Sea? Yes, but I’d encourage people to consider other similar programs also.

An

  • Notable fact: An calls both Sherri and me “boss”. Hey boss. At first, it felt really uncomfortable, but I’ve grown to like it. I'm really going to miss hearing An's voice around the corner: Hey boss.
  • What will you miss most? The ports.
  • What are you looking most forward to about going home? My car, my sofa, my television, my food, friends. Mostly my car.
  • When we were sitting in the piano bar ... and you learned that you would be working in the library, what was the first thing that crossed your mind? what the … ?
  • What was the best part about working in the library? The whole educational experience (... BS … says Sherri, before he even finishes his sentence…)
  • Would you recommend Semester at Sea? Hell, yes … I mean, yes, of course …

Erika

  • Notable fact: Erika’s boyfriend is Ryan who is one of my nephews in my extended family. So, Erika is my niece-in-law in addition to being my workstudy student. Erika & Ryan were together before they came on this trip. They both go to San Diego State and they are one of a handful of couples who came on this voyage together. I told them the other day that I wanted to be invited to their wedding. They both looked at me fairly horrified!
  • What will you miss most? Going around the world.
  • What are you looking most forward to about going home? Seeing my baby cousins.
  • When we were sitting in the piano bar ... and you learned that you would be working in the library, what was the first thing that crossed your mind? I’m working with the person who is from my home town [that would be Sherri].
  • What was the best part about working in the library? Ice-cream cake birthdays.
  • Would you recommend Semester at Sea? Of course, my sister is doing it.

Roxy

  • Notable fact: Roxy is from King of Prussia, so like Sherri/Erika, Roxy and I are also from the same general area. There was mall-talk the other day, in fact …
  • What will you miss most? Fun activities, like the Sea Olympics and talent show. And waking up in a new country every few days.
  • What are you looking most forward to about going home? Seeing my family and friends.
  • When we were sitting in the piano bar ... and you learned that you would be working in the library, what was the first thing that crossed your mind? I thought it’d be good because I’d get to meet a lot of people.
  • What was the best part about working in the library? All the people, it's the most social place to work.
  • Would you recommend Semester at Sea? Of course!
Clearly, I've got a very social crew! They've been great and they've given super customer service (never mind the part that they don't always give out the right information! ...). But they've been really reliable and they jump at anything we ask and, all in all, they've been really good to work with. And they all tolerated the fact that when they showed up on day 3, Sherri and I had absolutely no idea what we were doing yet, so it was difficult to train them and figure out what we needed for them to do. I've enjoyed working with all of them. At the end of the ice-cream party, Erika got up and thanked Ron for the workstudy program and said that many of them would not have been able to do this voyage without that support. We were glad to provide it and the library couldn't have run successfully without them!

07 May 2007

aloha

a very pleasant day in Hawaii. There was much confusion in the morning. As mentioned yesterday, we thought we were doing only immigration & not customs. But then, last minute, we were asked to fill out customs declaration forms also. Which none of us were really prepared to do. And that, of course, meant we could mail things after-all, but I wasn’t prepared for that either … we were awakened, though, as promised -- that part happened without delay -- at 6 am. The Deans sang to us at 6 am over the very-loud-speaker.

I spent the morning at the Arizona Memorial at Pearl Harbor. After just being in Hiroshima, this was very different. The Hiroshima Peace Park seemed to me to be about healing. It was a place for people to come and pray and pay witness to the horror of what happened there. The Arizona Memorial seemed to be a historical account of what happened there. It was about war. You see a 20-minute movie that starts with Japanese aggression in 1931 and ends with Midway. “The tide of the war turned with Midway” and then the movie ends. Then you take a shuttle-boat out to the memorial itself which is the sunken USS Arizona with still 1000 people buried within. It’s a tomb. It is very beautifully done and there is a really impressive marble wall with the names of the dead, but they are marching tourists through on a 15-minute schedule. It’s a graveyard, but it’s hard to have time to stop and really reflect. At Hiroshima, you walked around the museum and the park at your own pace, doing whatever you needed to do absorb the enormity of the event. At Pearl Harbor, we were told a lot about the enormity of the event, but you are not given enough time to take it in. The memorials were also similar in interesting ways. As mentioned in my Japan post, the Hiroshima museum significantly tones down the issues of Japanese aggression. At Pearl Harbor, not once are we told that the U.S. ended the war by dropping nuclear bombs on Japan. The movie ends with Midway. I found that kind of astounding. It’s all about who tells the story.

The Arizona memorial is quite moving, I don’t mean to imply otherwise. It just feels primarily more like a tourist attraction than did Hiroshima, although Hiroshima is quite so also. The Hiroshima memorial (much like the Vietnam Vet memorial in D.C.) allows the visitor more time and space.

We did a little bit of a city tour after, seeing the National Cemetery:

And the statue of Kamehameha I, who established the kingdom of Hawaii in 1810:

We learned that Honolulu has the only state capitol building in the U.S. without a dome. And we learned that, despite customary practice, Hawaii does not fly the U.S. flag along with the Hawaii flag on it's public buildings. They are very happy to be a state (we were told), but like to hold on to that bit of independent resistance.

We got back to the ship late (we left late after all the customs confusion) and I was supposed to meet Kate & Robin for the afternoon, but they had already left. I ran into Dawn and we caught up with the others at a restaurant on the waterfront. I had a burger and endless refills of Diet Coke, which made me unbelievably happy after 3 ½ months. We walked around Honolulu in search of a post office and a pharmacy to run a few errands and then Dawn and I walked to the beach. We had three goals: post office, pharmacy, beach. In most places, if we went out with three goals and achieved just one of them we felt proud! It was always a cultural experience, but initial goals were quite often hard to meet. Here, we set out with three goals and accomplished three goals. It was very exciting! It definitely helps when you can speak the language and read the signs. The beach was small but lovely. Not Waikiki or any of the other famous, beautiful beaches … it seemed like a beach for normal people, but that was just lovely. We watched kids swim in the ocean. The water was colder than I expected.

And then we met back up with Robin and with Joyce and Bob and had a lovely dinner again on the waterfront. I had scallops and salad and endless refills of Diet Coke.

This scene struck me as funny. It was this morning as we waited in the Union for the trips to depart. Students back in U.S. cell-phone-contact:

Flickr photos for Hawaii are up at: http://www.flickr.com/photos/-erin/sets/72157600191044520/
Aloha and welcome home to the United States.

06 May 2007

02:03:04 05/06/07

today at four seconds past three minutes past two a.m., the time/date was 02:03:04 05/06/07. I didn’t wake up to experience this once in a century event, but it definitely is worth taking note of.

It was sort of an odd day today. The library was unusually quiet. It’s the day before port and the last day of classes. The Global Studies exam was this morning. Normally the day before port, there is heavy traffic in travel guides, but not so this time. Either folks already know what they are doing in Hawaii or they are not doing much. We’re only there for the day, anyway. Mostly what I’ve heard is that the students who were jealous of their friends’ sky-diving adventures in South Africa are planning to sky-dive in Hawaii. And lots of people are counting the hours to the return to U.S. cell phone service so that can talk to friends/family at the cost of normal minutes. And then there’s the beach. I have a morning trip planned to Pearl Harbor (I’m a trip leader) and my afternoon is free. I’d like to walk along the beach also. My original plan was to mail some packages home, but they are not letting us take anything off the ship. We’ll be going through immigration in Hawaii, but not Customs. So, we’re not allowed to take any more off the ship than we need for our one day stop in Hawaii. No boxes and no large backpacks. And no food, except for sealed bottled water. That news put a damper in a lot of people’s plans. I would like to find a UPS store, or even a CVS, for a few packing supplies. I have tape, but no markers. Robin has bubble wrap. I currently have 2 boxes and was going to pack them tonight so that I had a sense of whether I needed to buy more, but it’s a busy night. Don’t know that I’ll get that done. Plus, I’m really hoping I don’t need more than 2 boxes …

We’re told immigration is going to start at 6:00 am tomorrow. They’ll wake us up for face-to-face meetings with the immigration officers and we’ll get our passports back and our immunization cards back and then we hold on to them for the duration. We’ll officially be back in the United States. I’d like to get up early to watch us dock, but that’ll be REALLY early tomorrow and we lose another hour of sleep tonight. I don’t know that I can make that happen. I’ll get up for San Diego.

I’ve gotta say, I’m kind of looking forward to understanding the money without having to do math, I’m looking forward to easily finding an ATM, and I’m looking forward to being able to read the signage. I’m also looking forward to -- in principle -- finding toilet paper in the ladies room. And, even though it was very interesting to read other countries’ impressions of the U.S., I’d like to get my hands on an American newspaper. It should be a nice day.

05 May 2007

welcome back to the tropics

it’s rainy & warm & humid outside again. When did that happen?? I was inside for lunch today because I sat down at a table with inside-sitting-folks, but I didn’t really pay attention. When I went up for a mid-afternoon snack of Diet 7-Up and popcorn, the pool-deck was flooded-wet. Water, water, everywhere. Somehow, it’s possible to be on a boat and not even notice it’s pouring …

Today, we spent a lot of the day watching the crew fix the fire door that slammed the other afternoon when the ship lurched. A whole bunch of crew climbing on ladders, taking apart the ceiling, the mechanical apparatus that operates the door, etc. etc. It was a very big operation. After it was all reassembled and the ceiling panels were put back together and the lights were all turned on again, a higher-ranking crew member walked through (the rest were already gone) and he was clearly not satisfied. I dunno, it all looked pretty perfect to me. (But, then again I hadn't noticed it was raining either ...) As I was leaving the library, he was back with the other crew looking again at the ceiling and the lights. You can’t imagine how meticulously the crew cares for this ship. Everything is immaculate always. If a piece of paper or a tissue drops to the floor, there’s a crew member appearing out of nowhere to pick it up. There are crew who are -- everyday -- polishing the hand-rails. A lot of it is for health concern (disinfecting), because they don’t want anything contagious going around the ship, but the general level of cleanliness & shine far out-ranks any 5-star hotel. They are big into perfection!

Aside from watching the crew fix the fire-door … I did quite a bit of catalog data-cleanup today. Felt good, I accomplished a lot and (aside from the very un-ergonomic desk conditions), it functions a bit for me as mindfulness meditation! I hope, when I bring these records back to my staff at UVA, that they are kind. We did a lot of work this voyage, but there is still much to be done. There are still a bunch of brief records here-and-there for books and I still have a last stack of original VHS cataloging that I haven’t had time to get through. The only VCRs are in the classrooms, which are hard to come-by. I could try to finish them off during finals week. Or, I’m trying to decide whether they are worth shipping back to UVA or whether we should just leave the brief records in there …

David & Phoebe hosted a “clean-up” party tonight. To finish up the snacks (both crunchy & liquid) that we have all accumulated over the course of this voyage. Every time we found a supermarket, it was so exciting that we bought all we could. I contributed bagel chips & granola bars that I bought I-can’t-even-remember-now-when-or-where. Phoebe & David have a cabin that is much nicer than many, but still much too small to comfortably seat the 18 people that were there tonight. We were on the sofa and on the bed and on the floor and standing all over the place. I wanted my photos to give you the perspective of all those people in a very small space, but I’m not sure I succeeded. Here are a few photos from the evening:

Joyce, Kate, Dawn, Bob:

Vladdy, Gene, Arnie:

Phoebe & Gloria (I love this photo!):

Bob, Monty, Michael:

Robin, Mary, Joyce, Kate, Dawn:

Here are a few scrunched photos. Standing are David, Giles, Phoebe, and Gloria. In front of the sliding glass door is Joyce. What you can’t see is that Robin is seated to the left next to Joyce, Mary in between them on the floor, and Kate, Dawn, and Bob are on the sofa. Pretend that last photo was behind this photo. What you see at the front of this photo is the bed. There were A LOT of us in that space between the bed and the sliding glass door. And again, Phoebe & David have a VERY nice cabin. To give you some perspective of living quarters on the ship …

In this one, standing are Giles, Gene, Arnie, Phoebe and Gloria, and behind them blocked by Gloria and Phoebe are Robin, Mary, Joyce, Kate, Dawn, and Bob. Between Phoebe and the door. Crazy, but fun.

The night ended with a performance by more of Judyie’s theatre classes. For their finals, the students in the directing class directed a play, Stop-Kiss, with each student responsible for directing a scene. The scenes were then voted on by the class and the winning scenes were performed publicly. One of my nieces, Jen, was directing a scene and one of the faculty spouses was one of her actors (the actors were taken from all over the community). But, unfortunately their scene didn’t make the cut. The playwriting class also did readings tonight. They were all fabulous and it was very fun to watch.

Today was the last A-class-day and tomorrow is the last B-class-day. Monday, we'll be in Honolulu. We're all a bit sappy and sickeningly overly-reflective.

do you know that you are beautiful?

... asked the Archbishop as he went from table to table and laid his hands on our shoulders last night at the Ambassador’s Ball. I’m glad I went, if just for that one moment. The Ball was nice. Dinner definitely beat out the normal ship fare. Everyone was dressed up fancy and all of our favorite dining hall crew pulled out the stops for us. There was unscheduled lag time between dinner and dancing/dessert, which was sort of confusing and unexpected and so many faculty/staff detoured back to the faculty/staff lounge for wine and pleasant conversation. My photos didn’t come out great because of the yellow-ish ship lighting which was darkened, of course, for ambiance, but here are a few pictures of the evening.

Desmond & Leah Tutu:

Erika (one of our workstudy students) and her boyfriend, Ryan (my nephew, from my extended family):

Lindsay (another of our workstudy students) and her boyfriend, Ivan:

Andrea (left, my niece) with a friend:

Watching the students congregating in Purser’s Square, from above:

Giles and Kate (they are New Yorkers, can’t you tell???):

Crazy sculpted eagle-dessert:

I’m sure this trip will feel like a dream six months from now. Not least, the part about traveling the world with a Nobel Peace Laureate. This morning he called us "scrumptious" ... I’m trying to soak it in while I can …

03 May 2007

mostly horizontal

i spent most of the day today horizontal. We're moving much too much in my opinion and I’m not even nearly as ill as others. I can’t keep my eyes open, which they do say is low-grade sea-sickness. I actually think it’s a combination of things -- the movement plus the time changes plus end-of-voyage emotion and stress. It’s knocking me out. I slept and slept -- fortunately Sherri & I haven’t been sea-sick simultaneously, so we’ve conveniently alternated coverage as needed. There is a fire door that separates the library from the stairwell & the Union and this afternoon it slammed shut crazy-fast and crazy-loudly as the ship lurched far to the right (starboard). There were immediately 6 crew standing there chatting about the door. That probably was not supposed to happen …

I did come in for a bit (saw the fire door slam) and I am here again now, 8:00-9:00, to cover one of our students who wanted to go to a show tonight. The acting classes are putting on a show -- last night and tonight. I went last night and it was very fun. It was called “The 13th Port” and was totally written, directed, sung, acted by the class. They were great and it was really enjoyable to see them do their thing.

This morning was the last discussion group for Global Studies. Some went ok, some went not-so-ok, it was an interesting experiment. Consensus mainly was that we should have done this from the beginning. Tomorrow, the Archbishop is speaking.

Lots of studying happening in the library, but even more than that are group projects. The library has some of the only large-ish tables on the ship, so groups are spread out there and along the bar. We have to climb over folks to move around the library. The show is taking place in the Union and someone just came out of there into the library to tell students they shouldn’t be doing papers, they should go see some theatre instead. That’s definitely one of the challenges here on the ship, many, many extracurricular options … although the students in the library all looked up at him and then went back right on studying. The music is pretty loud, so I will likely get to hear the show all over again.

Another time change tonight -- we’ll be 7 hours behind the East Coast and closing in …

02 May 2007

may second the second

may 2nd is Sage's birthday. Toni teaches psychology and women's studies and Sage is her 11-year old daughter. Here's how cool it is to be a kid on a ship going around the world: first, if your birthday is may 2nd, 2007, you get to have your birthday twice. And, if that weren't cool enough, you get to have the Archbishop and Leah Tutu come to your birthday party. AND, they coming bearing gifts. For my part, it seemed kind of mind-boggling (forget even the whole part about traveling round the world at the age of 11!). For Sage's part, she was just running around happy as can be cutting cake (the most giant round birthday cake you've ever seen) for the Desmond & Leah Tutu and for all of us and for all the dining-hall crew.

here’s what wikipedia says about the international dateline:

The International Date Line (IDL), also known as just the Date Line, is an imaginary line on the surface of the Earth opposite the Prime Meridian which offsets the date as one travels east or west across it. Roughly along 180° longitude, with diversions to pass around some territories and island groups, it corresponds to the time zone boundary separating +12 and −12 hours GMT (UT1). Crossing the IDL travelling east results in a day or 24 hours being subtracted, and crossing west results in a day being added.

The first date-line problem occurred in association with the circumnavigation of the globe by Magellan's expedition (1519–1522). The surviving crew returned to a Spanish stopover sure of the day of the week, as attested by various carefully maintained sailing logs. Nevertheless, those on land insisted the day was different. Although now readily understandable, this phenomenon caused great excitement at the time, to the extent that a special delegation was sent to the Pope to explain this temporal oddity to him.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Date_Line

After today, instead of being ahead of the East Coast, we are now behind the East Coast. Yesterday, we were 15 hours ahead and now we are magically 9 hours behind. Too much math for me … I don’t get it.

Nor does my computer for that matter, which keeps reverting to May 3rd, even though I keep changing the setting to May 2nd. The desk computer is having a very hard time calculating due-dates as well.

I went to bed at 6:30 last night. I went to dinner about 6:15 and it was totally un-inspirational, so I went back to my cabin and laid down instead. I slept until 8:45 (pm) when I got up to change my clothes and get ready for real-sleep. And I slept until my alarm went off at 8:00 am this morning. Yipes. I was pretty drained.

Japan photos are up at: http://www.flickr.com/photos/-erin/sets/72157600170121524/ so I believe I'm all caught up now.

The weather outside is windy and cool, and so the seas are a bit rough again today. We've learned that the advantage of having the reserve shelves full is that the books stay much more secure. Despite the bookends, they've been sliding back and forth along the glass shelves today as the ship rocks. I'm going to miss my little library. I was talking about my real-job with some folks the other day and, when I said that UVA adds more than 60,000 books each year, I realized that is 6 times the number of books in the collection here. Each year at UVA, we add the size of this library more than 6 times over. That's kinda crazy, when you think about it. Don't anyone shoot me for asking this, but do we really need all those books????

may second the first

today is the first May 2nd. It’s a quieter day than others for which I am very grateful. And it was taco-day for lunch, for which I am also very grateful. I made a little headway getting photos up. The China flicker set is up at: http://www.flickr.com/photos/-erin/sets/72157600166556242/ Japan still to come.

Library business was moderately busy, but people seem mostly drained and sleepy from all the time changes. The seas are rougher today than normal. When we opened the library this morning, we noticed the crew had put barf-bags on the desk. I had some small things fall to the floor overnight. I’m doing ok, although I did put the sea-sickness bracelets back on. Moral support, if nothing else.

Joe emailed today to ask about picking me up at the airport. I guess it’s that soon, I need to start making those sorts of arrangements …

01 May 2007

who needs corptime?

when I was working on my annual report for UVA, I opened up CorpTime for the first time since January. CorpTime is our electronic calendaring system. There was a whole mess of meetings in my inbox. Not sure how I can be scheduled for so many meetings when I'm not even there?? Might anybody care to explain?

No CorpTime here, but still much too much going on all at once. Last night, as mentioned, was the crew talent show. Tonight was a charity auction. Every moment is planned. At first, I was enjoying the meeting-less culture (so different from UVA), but it’s just a different kind of perpetual scheduling here. After working all day, tonight at 5:00 we had a life-boat drill, at 6:00 we had a faculty-dinner-meeting where a group of faculty are discussing the various challenges of teaching in this kind of environment and where I was to address some research issues, at 6:30 (for which I was 1/2 hour late), was a birthday party for one of Mary & Michael’s adopted kids (my nephew, as we’re calling these weird extended relationships), at 8:00 was Community College where Robin was presenting on Japonisme & Impressionism, at 9:00 was the charity auction. I left about 10:30 and should have just gone to sleep, but decided to check email … and then blog … first. I’m not sure precisely when students get any studying done … Although, of course, they are also willing to stay up all night long …

I left the auction just after Dr. Matt paid $175 to throw a pie in the face of Dean Mike. I bid on navigational maps earlier in the silent auction -- the printed maps the crew use to mark our route and position, signed by the crew. I stopped at $160, which already seemed frighteningly high, and they finally went for $300. All sorts of things were getting auctioned off, folks who have vacation homes and condos put weekends up for people to bid on, folks with season sports tickets put up various sets, there were handmade necklaces and such, and purchases that people have made along the way but have decided they no longer want to lug home. I imagine they’ll tell us the final tally tomorrow. Students were paying *a lot* of money for all sorts of things. It was a little bit astonishing.

We lose another hour of sleep tonight. Tomorrow, we are at GMT +11 and then the following day, we cross the international date line. We’re going to get back the 24 hours that we’re losing on the course of this voyage. May 2nd will happen twice. Tomorrow will be Wednesday, May 2nd and the following day will also be Wednesday, May 2nd. Isn’t that the weirdest thing? Hard to wrap my brain around. Everybody has been complaining that it is unfair that we have lost all the time in sleep and we are gaining it back as a regular work/class day … it is indeed most unfortunate ...

30 April 2007

thinking about thinking about winding down

our free-sites issue with the UVA databases got fixed this evening. There were many other sites also that were on the “free” list (meaning students don’t need to pay for minutes) that weren’t working properly either. Not just UVA. I’m glad it’s fixed and I’d really like this to be the end of our technology woes.

Today, we started pulling materials off reserve. I asked all the faculty to let us know what they no longer need on reserve, so that we can start to move materials back into the general collection. I’m fine with keeping everything that’s needed on reserve, but if some materials can come off now, I’d prefer not to have to do it all at the end. We had stacks and stacks and stacks of books piled high (and falling off) the desk today. By, the end of the day when they were all taken off reserve and reshelved in the stacks, and I looked back at the reserve shelves, there are still a ton of books up there. Nothing compared to UVA, of course, but still many for us. Sherri and I were taking stabs at what percentage of the reserve materials actually ever circulated … but I won’t post our guesses in the blog … More will come off in the next few days, though I imagine there will still be a lot until the end. It was a pretty productive day. Sherri made collection development decisions on all the textbook-like things. We got everything taken care of that we could. My goal in the next 8 days before Hawaii is mainly system documentation. We’ve got the software figured out pretty well now and we just need to write it all up for the future voyages.

Global Studies -- the class that the whole shipboard community attends -- is taking a new turn for the next 5 days. We are having short introductory remarks and then breaking into small group discussions for the duration of the class (30-40 minutes). I am co-facilitating a small group and we have 15 students -- the same students everyday for the next 5 days. (Usually students attend Global Studies (or don’t) in whatever classroom they choose.) Attendance will count as points towards the final exam. The second to last day before Hawaii will be the Archbishop, the last day will be a group of students talking about impact and activism, and then the final exam. We’re trying to use these small group discussions to move from information overload to a time for processing and reflecting on everywhere we’ve been and how we can use what we have learned to guide the world forward. It’s not an inconsequential goal for the very short amount of time we have left …

And then there was the crew talent show. They were great. There were a whole number of crew we’ve never seen before (folks who work in the engine room, the laundry, etc.) and then there were our favorite people from the dining hall and the purser’s desk and our cabin stewards … They sang and danced and played music and did stand-up and carved ice sculptures while the crew in the background all sang We Are the World (there goes another scary high-school flashback …)

Clocks go forward tonight an hour. We lose an hour every night for very many nights from here to Hawaii. Ugh

29 April 2007

meet george jetson

i took 6 months of Japanese long long ago. Here’s the sum total of what I remember: konnichiwa (hello), ohayo gozaimas (good morning), arigato (thank you) and I can count to five: ichi, ni, san, shi, go. Actually, in a game the other night with some students, I realized I can count to five in about a dozen different languages. Higher, only in Spanish. Hello & thank you has gotten me pretty far in all the other countries and so far so good here. Knowing how to count would have made other transactions easier, I asked for a ticket at the castle in Himeji, saying “ichi”, and it made me very proud!

Day 1. I woke up early for another port entry that turned out to be foggy and gray. It was raining. But, there were was a lot of welcoming hoopla in Kobe nonetheless. We were met by a fireboat spraying water around us, but it was really too rainy and windy and cold outside to enjoy. We also had a welcoming ceremony where some pretty immense drums were played. It was lovely. Then a group of us took the train to Himeji Castle. The train was very cool, starting with a monorail-like-thing from the port terminal. Very George Jetson-y.

Himeji Castle looks very unlike European castles. There was a fort on the site built in 1333 and the castle was built in 1580. It has a heavily fortified main tower (and we climbed to the top on steep narrow stairs). And a moat and lovely grounds around. And many many fewer tourists than the attractions in China.

Here’s a group photo of some of my favorite ship-people from that day:

Vladdy, Sue & Bianca, David & Phoebe, Robin, Mary & Michael, and (behind Mary and Michael) Giles & Kate.

For dinner we went to a restaurant where we had to take off our shoes and sit on not-quite-the-floor, but wooden benches that were pretty low with square cushions marking each seat. We ordered from a display window and did our best to communicate our desires to the waitstaff. It was a relaxed and enjoyable first day in Japan. I’m going to miss my traveling partners when we get off this boat.

Day 2 was a trip to Kyoto to visit various shrines and historical sites around the city. We started at the Golden Pavilion (Kinkaku-ji) constructed in the 1390’s by the 3d Shogun of Ashikaga. It was his retirement villa before his son converted it into a Zen Buddhist Temple. The three story pavilion is topped by a bronze phoenix and beautiful gardens with some very old trees surrounding it.

Next, we visited the Nijo Castle, built in 1603 as the official Kyoto residence of the first Shogun. Kyoto served as the capital of Japan up until the late 1800s when it moved to Tokyo. The main castle structure is only one floor, because it never served as a fort, and it is built in a zig-zag pattern like this:

. L
.. L
... L
.... L
........

so that every room had a view of the gardens at the bottom. There were beautiful murals (no photos allowed). We took off our shoes to enter, as we have in most places in Asia. The wooden floor is called a Nightingale Floor and it squeaks as you walk -- to announce intruders. There’s a contraption underneath that controls the noise. It is a much nicer musical noise than my hard-wood floor which also squeaks …

Then we lunched (ship boxed lunch, yuck) in a beautiful, lovely, peaceful park. The incorporation of nature everywhere (and feng shui) is in clear evidence in Kyoto. We are in Japan just a little bit too late for full cherry blossom blooming, but there were still some flowers around. Children playing in the park:

After lunch we went to see a Shinto Shrine. Shinto is the indigenous religion of Japan and there is no human founder (wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shinto). The Heian Shrine was very orange and we walked around there and learned how Shintos pray. On entry to the shrine, we passed through a gate which ritually purified us and then we purified ourselves further by washing our hands in mineral water. People then purchase little wood placards and they write wishes on them that are offered up to the gods, along with other offerings like sake and cigarettes.

Our last stop was the Kiyomizu Temple (Buddhist) which had beautiful sweeping views of the city.

As I think I’ve mentioned before, if we could do something about the tourists, I could totally be a monk. It was beautiful up there and peaceful and lovely. Most of the tourists on this trip were Japanese school children. Almost all in uniform, laughing and learning and saying “hello” to us as we passed. I remembered (almost) always to respond with “konnichiwa”. They would smile and laugh. We also got a Japanese lesson from our tour guide on the bus from Kobe and now I can count to 10 again. We’ll see how long it sticks.

Japan is so different than the places we’ve been to thus far. It’s all very orderly and planned. None of the madness of China or India. The train station has writing on the station floor so that you know where the doors will open and you can queue up appropriately before the train arrives. And the train arrived exactly the moment it said it would. There are vending machines everywhere that sell everything from soda to snacks to ice cream to coffee.

They are banks and banks of vending machines all over the place. Even the packaging is different. Part can, part bottle. Keeps the soda cold, like a can (yup, it’s aluminum), but twist-cap open and re-sealable like a bottle. I started calling them "canolottles". Why don’t we have these???

Everything is crystal-clean. On the highway today, we noticed the barriers that are on the sides of the road to contain the noise curve in at the top, instead of ours that are straight up. Does a much better job (or so they say) of preventing noise and exhaust pollution. Taxi cabs have doors that open and close automatically. The bus parking lots are in long numbered lanes. One bus pulls forward in behind the next. You remember your lane’s number. The buses can advance in the lane (the first bus pulling out and the rest advancing), but it can’t change lanes. With this, they don’t have to back in/out of parking spaces and it is easier for you to remember where to find your bus. The escalators stop when no one is on them. To conserve electricity. When you step just before the first step, they start moving again. Some of them are bidirectional. If you step at the bottom, it goes up. If you step at the top, it goes down. In some of the public toilets, you wash your hands into the back of the toilet tank rather than having a separate sink. When you flush, a spigot turns on and water flows for you to wash your hands into the tank which is then used to fill the toilet. Good for water conservation, also a good use of space -- you don’t need a separate sink. People queue up for the elevator. No jaywalking allowed. The traffic lights make bird-sounds when it’s time to cross. Public restrooms (though many of them are still squat) have noise-making machines in the stalls so that you don’t have to listen to everyone do their thing and many public restrooms (or many of the western ones) have toilet-seats that heat up because their buildings don’t have central heat. Some toilet stalls also have other buttons that do other things too … The whole place sets this tone of “we’ve got it figured out”. No worry, no stress, we know what to do, we’ve thought of everything. Meet George Jetson …

Many of the cars here have the side-view mirrors out on the hood instead of by the front windows.

I wonder if that’s something we’ll get too soon, on all those cars that are Japanese? … Looks kind of odd to us-Americans, but it also makes a lot of sense. Keeps you looking forward.

Our guide today was excellent, one of the best I’ve had on this voyage. She taught us a ton. The last thing she taught us as we arrived back into Kobe was: ichigo, ichi-e … once chance, once meeting. Every encounter occurs only once. No matter how many repeated meetings or events or occurrences. Each individual moment occurs only once. Several people on this voyage have sailed more than once. Someone said the other day though nonetheless: even if you get the opportunity to do it again, you go around the world the first time only once.

Day 3 was a trip to Nara for more temple-viewing. By the end of the day, I had to confess that I think I’m done with all the temple-viewing. They are beautiful and lovely and peaceful, but we’ve seen an absurd number of them all told on this voyage. The Buddhist temples here, though, are much different than elsewhere. The Shinto influence is clearly present. We went to two Buddhist Temples and one Shinto Shrine in Nara. The Shinto shrines are all about purification. There are gates (tori-i) as you enter to purify yourself and then you further purify yourself before entering by pouring water over your hands with a ladle. First you pour the water on your left hand, then on your right hand, then again on your left hand from which you can drink to clean your mouth and then you tip the ladle and pour out the excess water over the handle to purify the ladle itself for the next person. The Buddhist Temple we visited also began with this Shinto purification ritual. The Buddhist Temples in India and Malaysia and China were all about color. Beautiful painted color. Here, in Japan, they were much more natural wood-color, although the Shinto shrines in both Kyoto and Nara were bright orange. The Buddhist Temples here also incorporate nature in more substantial ways than those in any of the other countries. They are planned with nature in mind and the grounds are all meticulously manicured. We started at the oldest surviving wooden structure in the world (Horyu-ji), built in 607:

And moved to the next temple, Todai-ji, which is the largest wooden structure in the world.

It was built in 743 but destroyed by fire several times and the current building dates from 1706. It is considered the world’s largest wooden structure, but the original building was actually considerably larger. The park surrounding the Temple is called Nara Deer Park, because there are deer everywhere. They are perfectly tame and people feed them from their hands. As with previous days, there were groups of schoolchildren everywhere:

The big wooden structure contains a very big Buddha – a bronze statue of the Cosmic Buddha. It was immense. We ended the day in Nara with a visit to the nearby Kasuga Taisha Shinto Shrine. The pillars are bright orange and the building is surrounded by stone lanterns in a lovely forest:

Deer are considered messengers to the Gods in Shinto. The story goes that a white deer arrived at the Kasuga Shrine in Nara as its divine messenger. And so deer are considered sacred and free to roam. Mary, our trip leader today who teaches spirit possession, warned us to be careful that we don’t get possessed along the way in travels through the forest. Shintos believe that you can become possessed by the Kami spirits (go look it up on wikipedia). We were very careful! Although, on our meanderings back to the bus, Joyce talked about how she was going to miss our wanderings throughout the world. When we get back to real-life. So, we have all definitely been possessed by the Spirit of Meandering & Travel & Wanderlust. And the Spirit of Short-Attention-Spans. I’m a little worried that it will be hard to work a complete five-day week after this voyage …

Day 4. Saturday in Hiroshima. Mary & Michael & I took the monorail in Kobe … to the subway … to the bullet train … to the street car … to the Peace Memorial Park in Hiroshima. Afterwards we took a ferry to Miyajima. And from Miyajima, we took a ferry … to the Hiroshima subway … to the bullet train … to the Kobe subway … to the monorail … back to our ship. The transportation system couldn’t possibly be easier here. Everything was completely intelligible even if you don’t speak Japanese and each vehicle left perfectly on time and arrived to exactly the place we expected perfectly on time. It was astounding.

Hiroshima was astounding. We stared in the Peace Park, whose central memorial is the A-Bomb dome.

The building was built in 1915 with a central green dome. The name of the building varied, but largely it was the Hiroshima Prefectural Industrial Promotion Hall. It was used to display and sell prefectural products and do market research and consulting for local businesses. Its galleries served for art exhibitions, fairs, and other events. When the bomb was dropped on August 6, 1945, it was one of many buildings that were heavily damaged but this one was the one chosen to memorialize the event. The dome was still recognizable after the bomb. A number of preservation/reinforcement projects have occurred over the years, but it is largely as it was in 1945 immediately after the bomb was dropped. The park is beautiful. It spans both sides of the river and there are various and separate memorials all around. There is a flame that will burn until the last nuclear bomb is destroyed; there is a monument to memorialize student victims, child victims, Korean victims, and more. There is a centograph that contains the names of all the people who died. People were praying there at the centograph and laying flowers. There is a bell for visitors to ring to bring peace to the world. The children’s memorial park holds a collection of origami cranes. The story goes that a little girl dying after the war from leukemia -- the result of radiation -- believed that if she could fold 1000 cranes, she would not die. But, she did die before she finished and her schoolmates folded the remaining cranes in her memory. As did schoolchildren all over Japan. The kids on the ship here (children of faculty and staff) folded 1000 cranes over the last several weeks and they delivered them to the children’s peace park this week.

The park is beautiful and calm and amazingly peaceful. The museum itself is very intense. There was an introductory movie that I had to walk out of. Michael had commented earlier that he heard the movie was really hard to sit through. I said, at that time, that this is why were here, right? To bear witness in some way. But, I literally felt like I would pass out. I had to leave the auditorium.

Giles and Kate (who had gone the day before) were critical of the museum for its general presentation of what happened during the war and the role (not-so-much-acknowledged) of Japanese aggression. They cited a recent U.S. newspaper article that criticized the use of the passive voice in the museum labels: “the war erupted” … “children died who would not have died had the war not ever happened” (by the A-bomb? by the war in general? -- take that however you like, a lot of thought went into that choice of language …) … but, in fact, the passive voice was used regarding American transgressions as well. Several times it said “the bomb was dropped” without that same sentence attributing agency. Certainly, though, it could be surmised by the context. I wondered if the passive voice was just more the Japanese narrative style, I don’t know. The translations were all good -- there weren’t any of the odd translations that we see on the streets -- so I’m not sure anything was lost in translation. And they do attribute agency in many other places: “In 1941, with a surprise attack on the U.S. army and navy bases at Pearl Harbor, Japan started the Pacific War against the U.S. and its allies.” I thought it was pretty fairly balanced, although all the information definitely comes (as it does always) from a particular perspective. Giles studies how history gets told and who gets to tell it and who gets left out, so they noted the lack of mention of the comfort women and the broader history of the Allied/Axis powers and he is right there. No mention of anything there. There is a lot of auxiliary information that is noticeably missing. But, it’s a memorial museum to the bomb, its after-affects, and the start of the nuclear age. Not the history of World War II. Made me wonder what a 9/11 museum would be like (will be like?) …

We passed this sign alongside some roof tiles that have rough bubbles on them due to the explosion: “Feel free to touch these items. They are safe.” I thought this was fascinating. The restriction on touching museum objects are usually intended to keep the museum objects safe. It’s usually (always?) about the objects, not about the people. They also had on display a metal lunch box that was full of ash from the meal originally contained inside. There were many artifacts on display, that one just really touched me.

Something to note: the Japanese consider Pearl Harbor to be December 8th. Because of the time difference … And while we (Americans) all have memorized the date of Pearl Harbor, I had no idea of the exact date the bomb was dropped. Almost every plaque here started with: “At 8:15 a.m., August 6, 1945 …” It’s all about perspective ... “We see things not as they are but as we are.” ...

I came back for the end of the movie to catch back up with Michael and Mary. At the end there was a beautiful song and I’ve spent the morning trying to google the lyrics, to no avail. I wish I could share it with you. It was a likely a poem set to music, I’ll keep searching …

We walked through the park again to other parts we didn’t catch in the first pass-through. De-compressed, let back a little air into our lungs. Breathed in the beautiful sunny 65-degree day. Recovered.

Afterward, we took a ferry to Miyajima to visit the “floating shrine”. The Shinto shrine and the accompanying tori-i gate are constructed of wood and built to look as if they are floating in the water. We were warned by our guidebook that most often they are sitting in mud. The ferry ride was unexpectedly fabulous. It went up the narrow river through Hiroshima for quite a while and then the river opened up much wider and there were mountains in view and fishing boats and fish farms. And blue blue water (as if we haven’t seen enough blue water by now). Michael and Mary and I spent the 35 minute ride largely talking about where we were on 9/11. Vietnam/Iraq … Hiroshima/September 11. How we go there in our heads …

We arrived on the island and walked along the water up to the shrine and indeed it was surrounded by mud. People were walking along the beach, which was lovely, and the shrine was definitely very beautiful but it was sitting in the middle of mud.

We toured the shrine, did some shopping, and as we came back around we could tell the tide was coming in. We went to go find some dinner and then went back to the shrine just as the sun was setting. By that time, the water had come up all the way to make it appear indeed to be floating. It was very beautiful:

And then we took the ferry … to the Hiroshima subway … to the bullet train … to the Kobe subway … to the monorail … back to the ship … This day ranks as one of the best of the trip. Mary and Michael were great to travel with, the travel logistics were a breeze, there was history and culture and sadness and relief and hope and peace and calm and beauty. I had a perfect day.

Day 5. I want to live in Japan. Today I roamed around Kobe, starting with Robin & Giles & Kate walking into town from the ship, rather than the monorail. And then they went back to the ship after lunch to grade papers and I just roamed aimlessly some more. Lunch wasn’t great, but we had salad and I drank ice-water -- which is the first time in 3 months that I’ve had salad and ice-cubes! The water is safe to drink here and tap-water-washed-salad is safe and street food is safe. In Japan, I had fish-on-a-stick from the street vendors, and chicken-on-a-stick, and corn-on-a-stick, and ice cream. Like water, they suggested we not eat non-cooked dairy products in other countries as well. It felt totally wonderful to not have to worry about everything you put in your mouth! I may not have eaten terribly healthy here, but it was oh-so-fun! Back to today -- I was trying to find some gardens several people mentioned, but my map wasn’t very good and I was not at all successful. And, I got detoured by beautiful little streets and beautiful big streets and became totally absorbed by city life. Walking and walking and taking photos and dropping into the occasional store, but mostly walking and walking and taking photos and watching people go about their lives. I didn’t see any other Semester at Sea people, just Japanese people walking and talking and living.

This is the beginning of a week-long national holiday, Golden Week. And people were out everywhere, living their lives and enjoying their holiday. I walked until I couldn’t walk anymore and then took the monorail back to the ship. I loved Japan. I could totally live in Kobe. It’s amazingly easy to navigate, even without speaking Japanese. They literally couldn’t make it any easier. From the trains to finding a ladies room in a public space, all incredibly easy to manage. The orderliness, the calm, just reverberated back to me. I felt totally peaceful here, even in the middle of the downtown with people rushing living their lives. They’ve got a mission, they’ve got a plan, stress feels low, chaos is non-existent (or maybe just not allowed in). The Peace Park is about hope, not about sadness. The purification rituals are about being present in the moment. It was the coolest thing. I’d have to get used to not-jaywalking, and Robin kept shushing me all morning because I’m much too loud and everything around, even downtown public spaces, is much more quiet than I can manage, and having done a little-shoe shopping I learned that there’s no hope of finding shoes here in size 8 … so that would all be problematic. But other than those few little things, I could totally live here. I need to find a way to bring that kind of peacefulness into my life. Breathe it in. It is unbelievably refreshing.

Speaking of chaos … I have managed to do ok with the Internet access for most of this voyage. It helps that I have dial-up at home and so my expectations were adequately low. On my overnight trips, I hardly had any withdrawal at all. Being off the ship and tooling around, I had other priorities. But, being in Japan on the ship at night with no Internet access was really really really hard. We’ve seen a number of ads throughout Asia for Internet Addiction Recovery Centers and such, which seemed pretty amusing at first glance. But, feeling so much much much better now that I’m back online -- physical relief -- I actually do wonder about my state of Internet health …

Late last night, I stood on the deck and watched the lights of Kobe disappear behind us. Ready or not, here we come.