One week down, four more to go. That was the conversation today on the train on our way to visit Demitri. Has it gone quickly? Maybe that's it. Does it seem like forever since we left LAX? Quite possibly. I decided today that I have entered the next chapter of this Australian adventure: I am in a far away foreign land. The initial excitement and giddiness I felt when I first arrived here has by no means worn off, far from it in fact. I do think, however, that like one of the multiple cups of coffee i have enjoyed in the cafes of Sydney, I have acclimated to this state of mind. It is now easier to notice the small differences of Australia and its people than the familiar Americans. I think it is these minute details that make you realize you are far from home.
Let me elaborate...
The faces in Sydney are not much different than those you would see in any major U.S. city. The buildings are modern, the stores well stocked and people fill the sidewalks. It might be how everyone seems to be dressed in black and gray winter clothes while I wear my bright summer shorts. It could be that everyone is constantly on their cell phones while I don't even carry a phone. Or maybe it's the fact that I don't share anything in common with the people on the trains and buses. I am a foreigner in a far away land. Now, i could definitely be in a more foreign place than Australia and would stick out like a sore thumb, but I think this realization is an important step of my trip. The Australians here have their own Australia lives and own Australian worries and they aren't much concerned with us little American visitors. I am a guest in this country and now that I feel settled and in a routine, I see foreign culture and tendencies that I at first overlooked. Time to begin phase two of this adventure:... ... but I have no idea what that will be! A.J.'s not in Kansas anymore. (DUH).
*short entry, not an overly eventful day. Going on a fieldtrip in the morning then have the rest of the day free. If there is sun out I will surely be on the beach instead of exploring downtown. Hoping for the sunniest! Goodnight America.
Thursday, 30 June 2011
Wednesday, 29 June 2011
Cezanne me, please
Sydney served up a healthy does of culture tonight in the form of "Art After Hours" in the New South Wales Art Gallery. This was technically a school function and a field trip aimed to educated us on Aboriginal art, old and new. My workout-mates and I were running a bit late from Demitri's training session (Demitri update at the end of the post). This may have had something to do with catching the slow train and also making a food run to China Town for some delicious spicy pork and rice. We only missed 10 minutes of the first presentation though so we narrowly avoided getting detention (as if there was such a thing on study abroad. Don't worry mom, we didn't get in any trouble).
This art gallery is huge! Three full floors of exhibits and galleries. We began in the basement where there was a modern Aboriginal pieces including totems, dijeradoos, and bark decorated with the styles of the different tribes of Australia. There were also some more modern pieces such as decorated giant bats hanging from a clothes drying contraption (the Hills-Hoist Dryer). It was a very nice and interesting presentation. Well, actually it was slightly boring and I didn't take much from this modern take on Aboriginal art. I did really enjoy most of the older looking pieces and their variation. The Aborigines are very interesting people with a rich history. It is sometimes hard to, but important to separate them from my perception of the Native Americans. They are completely different people with completely different stories and I think in a way I automatically assume I know about the Aborigines because I have studied other Native inhabitants of colonized land. But this is another discussion for another day! Aborigines Art: cool.
We then had a presentation by a famous Aboriginal author in the main lobby of this place and I refuse to spend much time on this. She writes very feminine books about an Aborigines girl moving to the big city and having boy troubles. She talked for much too long, plugged her own books too much and brought up inappropriate things. Moving on.
My favorite part of this excursion to the Gallery was a moment coming up the escalator from the first Aborigines presentation. I had taken a look at some creepy modern pieces and really needed to get out of that exhibit so I was going upstairs to see when the feminist author was going to start speaking. I started to reflect on a trip I took the Nashville art gallery with my sister when I visited her at Vanderbilt. They had some really good Picasso pieces and also an artist who then became my favorite, Cezanne. To speak in "art" terms I like the bright landscapes he does and the distinct brush strokes. I'm not an art major, but let's just leave it at "I like his work". Anyway, going up the escalator the thought that came into my head was "I wonder if they have any Cezanne?". I then noticed a gallery right next to where the presentation was going to be, guarded by a uniformed gallery employee. I asked if we were allowed to go in the exhibit and he somewhat laughed at me. Of course it was open, he was just standing there to look busy. Literally the first piece I turn to on the wall was a simple, broad stroked, cottage scene ( Bords De La Marne ). My jaw dropped! It was a perfect moment in the most unexpected of places. Yes, I am able to have a good time looking at old art in a museum.
I spent the rest of my time looking at some amazing sculptures, a Van Goh, a Monet, and tons of other great paintings. What a collection. For the final course of my extremely fancy and cultural experience, i roamed the ancient china exhibit and looked at some very old Chinese kitchen accessories. Kidding, there was some great art that I know Jordan would have been drooling over. All of it thousands of years old. That concluded my tour and i might have to go back soon. It was only a few hours of a very busy day here in Sydney, but I think they were most worth sharing.
* Today with Demitri we continued our handstand walking, cartwheeling, somersaulting and added front flips on the trampoline onto the mats and also front somersault to landing. We then did the climb the rope, use the rings, crazy Demitri stuff and it was nice and hard. Can't wait to see what happens after four weeks of this! Oh, and he has 3% body fat.
**I also looked up the Cezanne painting i was so excited about. The NSW Art Gallery paid $16.2 million for it in 2008. I'm not sure about the exchange rate, but that's a lot.
Cheers!
Tuesday, 28 June 2011
Demitri the Soviet
I'm fully convinced that the gloomy, at times rainy day was a result of having to sit in class all morning. On the other hand, it probably made being in a classroom more bearable. Had it been sunny and 70 again today I would have only been thinking about catching the bus down to Bondi Beach and hopping in the water to body surf the waves. After class there was a long buffer period while everyone spread around the city, going to their first training sessions. My roommate Alex is doing the surfing program here and caught the ferry over to Manly beach. My training wasn't until 7:30 tonight but we had to leave around six to make sure we got out there, especially at "peak time" (rush hour). The train takes about an hour to get to Olympic Park with all the stops along the way. It's a group of about nine of us doing the strength and conditioning program. We are going to be training in the gymnastics facility from the 2000 olympics and we've been set up with the highest level of a character as well as a trainer.
Demitri (last name unknown) began his introduction stating that he is from the "Soviet Union, which they now call Russia". He is a former USSR national gymnastics coach and has also spent time coaching US olympians. He currently works in Sydney training stunt doubles for major Fox movies, Australian special forces, "Thunder Down Under" performers (a Las Vegas show... no more detail required) and even, believe it or not, the Wiggles. *Anyone not familiar with the Wiggles should type them into the Google machine and discover that they are synonymous with America's Raffi or Canada's Sharon Lois and Bram...but also Australia's top selling recording artists of all time...multi-platinum and apparently extremely fit!*
Our lesson today was more of an introduction. We are to be focusing on the core which apparently no one but gymnasts have properly developed. Warmup consisted of ab exercises, handstands, somersaults, cartwheels, and more handstands. Demitri took us through some basic exercises like climbing the rope, handstands on the wrings to flat front and back positions, "crosses" on the rings (arms straight out) and some other ab exercises all the while explaining his philosophy on training. From what i got through his accent, Demitri and his training friends get together and workout constantly for an hour, running from climbing the rope to ring exercises, to crazy parallel pullups to exercises i can't explain. There aren't breaks or time in between, they just go and go and do as much as they can then go and go and do more and find new things to do and go.....! This guy is nuts! I doubt there is much science behind his methods except for the fact they work. To get biceps that seem to also have their own sets of biceps you have to be a bit crazy, and get back to basics. It was a bit frustrating for me because I'm not quite built to be swinging around in a gymnasium and I literally couldn't do some of these exercises. But, I'm excited to go back tomorrow and see what Demitri has in store for us. I think that this will be an unbelievable training tool and i'm looking forward to the challenge. Some nice six pack abs wouldn't be bad either. Tonight is the first and likely the only night I catch the train home from the gym wanting more out of the session. I have a feeling i'll be cursing my new Soviet friend and his crazy gymnastics in the not so distant future.
Goodnight for now, another big day tomorrow!
Demitri (last name unknown) began his introduction stating that he is from the "Soviet Union, which they now call Russia". He is a former USSR national gymnastics coach and has also spent time coaching US olympians. He currently works in Sydney training stunt doubles for major Fox movies, Australian special forces, "Thunder Down Under" performers (a Las Vegas show... no more detail required) and even, believe it or not, the Wiggles. *Anyone not familiar with the Wiggles should type them into the Google machine and discover that they are synonymous with America's Raffi or Canada's Sharon Lois and Bram...but also Australia's top selling recording artists of all time...multi-platinum and apparently extremely fit!*
Our lesson today was more of an introduction. We are to be focusing on the core which apparently no one but gymnasts have properly developed. Warmup consisted of ab exercises, handstands, somersaults, cartwheels, and more handstands. Demitri took us through some basic exercises like climbing the rope, handstands on the wrings to flat front and back positions, "crosses" on the rings (arms straight out) and some other ab exercises all the while explaining his philosophy on training. From what i got through his accent, Demitri and his training friends get together and workout constantly for an hour, running from climbing the rope to ring exercises, to crazy parallel pullups to exercises i can't explain. There aren't breaks or time in between, they just go and go and do as much as they can then go and go and do more and find new things to do and go.....! This guy is nuts! I doubt there is much science behind his methods except for the fact they work. To get biceps that seem to also have their own sets of biceps you have to be a bit crazy, and get back to basics. It was a bit frustrating for me because I'm not quite built to be swinging around in a gymnasium and I literally couldn't do some of these exercises. But, I'm excited to go back tomorrow and see what Demitri has in store for us. I think that this will be an unbelievable training tool and i'm looking forward to the challenge. Some nice six pack abs wouldn't be bad either. Tonight is the first and likely the only night I catch the train home from the gym wanting more out of the session. I have a feeling i'll be cursing my new Soviet friend and his crazy gymnastics in the not so distant future.
Goodnight for now, another big day tomorrow!
Monday, 27 June 2011
Forward: Welcome to Sydney
After dreaming of coming to this country my entire life, I am finally a resident of Bondi Junction, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. This city has already proven to be more than i could have ever expected. I've been here about 5 days and I feel like i've seen and done so much there isn't possibly anything left in this city...but there is. There are so many places left to explore, beaches to enjoy, art to behold and coffee to taste. My secret mission of my trip to Australia is to find the best cup of coffee, or the best cappuccino in the entire city, or at least to find my favorite. A goal I hope takes me to some of the nooks and crannies of Sydney, not often discovered by an American here only a month. I hope to use this blog to keep my family and friends updated on my days here in Australia, and also so that i don't have to email my daily updates to everyone! Enjoy, I'm excited to share as much as I can of my Australian adventure.
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