(Written October 14th)
Living on a ship is sort of like living in Never-Never Land, except you wear a uniform and, itinerary permitting, you can get a tan. It strikes me as sort of ironic that, all throughout college, we’re being prepared for the real world, for responsibilities outside of dorm and scheduled classes, cafeteria lines and late night food, and, here I find myself, living in a tiny cabin, playing the same set times every week, eating in a buffet line restaurant every day with the possibility of room service at 2 in the morning.
But, hey, there’s a paycheck.
Not bad for a classical guitar major, no?
(Written October 16th)
Today the Ryndam became the first cruise ship to arrive at Guaymas, Mexico; in celebration, camera crews flooded the ship, the captain paraded well-attired “guests” around, and the locals gathered around the security check points to see the new arrivals and festivities to mark the occasion. It was undeniably surreal to suddenly have this odd significance(?) placed on our arrival. Passengers were given “Arriba Guaymas!” and the shore excursions left to applauding audiences.
If none of that sounds very interesting, maybe it’s because I’ve become a bit desensitized to the places we’ve hit so far. Tourist attractions are everywhere, signs are written in English with few bastardized Spanish phrases to hint at authenticity...it just never struck me as very real until Guaymas. Guaymas is real, and not afraid to show it. There’s dirt, cracked pavement, nearly no visible English, no souvenir shops or tourist-friendly locales. Other than an excursion kiosk right off the ship there’s really not much to see or do other than walk into the town itself and see something completely untouched (so far) and genuine.
Honestly, I dug it. No water taxi haggling, no one selling straw hats or sunglasses, just an actual, real, legitimate town. I got off the ship, walked around, and eventually ended up in a run down local bar with a few guys from the ship. We drank a few Pacificos, watched some kids play soccer, scoped out a lawn sale, then got back on the ship. Low key day, relatively uneventful, but nice. Calm. A completely welcome respite from seeing a damn Senior Frogs at every port (Senior Frogs=Mexico’s version of Hooters).
If you know me, you know I’m white. Very white. Unmistakably white. Therefore, I had “gringo” clearly stamped on my forehead. Still...I didn’t get any dirty looks. People smiled back at me, said “hola” or, if they spoke English, asked if I was from the ship. Everyone, literally everyone, at least acknowledged my presence in some friendly way. And, still, when I got back on the ship I heard passengers complaining about Guaymas, how there was nothing to do if you didn’t go on some shore excursion or find your way to the beach. I can’t lie, this pissed me off a little bit. Fine, there might not be attractions or big downtown areas, but at the very least you could just look around and enjoy the surroundings. Enjoy the fact that this part of Mexico is still Mexico, gritty, perhaps, but real, not modified for tourism. Maybe I’m being a bit of a punk writing that, but the thought struck me that day.
(Written October 17th)
Let me reiterate: I love my job.
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UPDATE YOUR BLOG!!!
...all the cool kids are doing it...
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