søndag 24. november 2013

Thanksgiving Break

I will post a blog about Field Trips pretty soon - it was completely and utterly awesome and I can't wait to show you pictures and tell you about it! But first. When we got home, we had a little more than an hour before we had Thanksgiving Dinner, and after that socializing happened and then almost everyone left the next morning. We are thirty-two people staying here, twelve of which are girls. Most, not all, of my people are currently scattered all over the States, and many of the faculty members are in hiding in their houses - pretending that the students aren't here. On Friday, when everyone still was here, my friend told me that bonding happens during Alternative Breaks, because everyone feels abandoned, which makes sense seeing as we only have three adults on duty. We are on weekend schedule, meaning we only get two meals a day, and when you're cheap and don't want to buy lots of extra food, that can make you kind of crazy, especially if you're hiding out in your room all day. I thought I could show my "schedule" for the past couple of days.

Alternative Thanksgiving Break Days: 

08:45 Wakes up... Hungry. Shoot, no food until ten! Waits impatiently while playing with iPhone.

09:55 Five minutes till brunch, I gotta run! Enters dining hall and, without the people I usually sit with, seats myself at the table with the view.

11:30 Whoops, brunch was over half an hour ago.. Should go and start the day in a productive way! ... Such as looking for all things "Humor" on Stumbleupon.

13:00 Should probably do something productive. Just five more minutes...

14:00 Hungry! Is it food time yet?

14:30 No? But I need food!

15:10 Almost two more hours - I can't.

15:45 FOOOOOOOOD

16:00 Only one hour left - I can do this!

16:05 Only... Wait. Only five minutes passed? This is not okay. I do not approve.

16:50 FOOD! Runs screaming to the Dining Hall.

17:00 Food actually happens!

19:00 Maybe I should leave the Dining Hall now and let the kitchen people go home, I mean, dinner kind of ended an hour ago... Kind of.

19:10 Goes back to room, and back on the computer. Tries to do something productive such as editing photos from Field Trip, ends up on Stumbleupon.

20:30 Tired - can check-in happen now? No? Guess I'll play with my computer for two more hours.

22:30 Check-in! What now? Bed? Yes! Sleep? No! iPhone? Yes. *grins*

23:00 Hungry.. Is it food yet? Eleven more hours... crap.

00:15 Falls asleep cradling my iPhone.


Okay, okay, so I might not be that bad. Just... Kind of close. Also, I just need to say that I am indeed very grateful for the meals we do get, I know not everyone is as fortunate.
Now I'm going to eat a Snickers bar, it's still eighty minutes till dinner happens.

Hungry lerve,

Ingrid


mandag 11. november 2013

Taos, New Mexico


We're here! We had our first workday today, it was pretty cool. The work is kind of repetitive and strenuos, but I think it's pretty awesome to think that now I know how to build a wall out of dirt and old tires. I've also been thinking a bit about the implications of what we're doing... And now I want an earthship house when I get older. Now I kind of think this is what this school is about. I get to experience things I never would have otherwise. Anyway, photos. 

 







lørdag 9. november 2013

Crestone - mah Field Trip

At VVS there are these requirements you have to fulfill to graduate. We have to do CAS. We have to do school every day. We have to do sports. And we also have to do Field Trips. If you don't do Field Trips, you have to do service by yourself in the summer, because Field Trips are about many things, but for some, including myself, mostly about service. There are Field Trips going to L.A., Utah, Texas, Hopiland, all over California, but in my case, Crestone, Colorado. This is a tiny spiritual community in the mountains of Colorado, and I think it looks really beautiful there.

Photo by Bill Elzey. Image source 
When I come back, I will be able to show you my own photos, because I'm bringing my D-SLR. I'm not sure if this is the wisest the decision I've ever made, because it weighs a ton, but I think it will be worth it,  if I'm able to document that beautiful place in the high quality of my camera.

Before we go to Crestone, though, we will spend five days in Taos, New Mexico, where we will be working four full days helping build earthship homes. An eartship home is a concept that involves full sustainability, meaning that if you want to be off the grid, you can. Sounds like it would be useful when the Robapocalypse comes. Anyway, your home generates its own electricit (or at least it can) and a lot of these houses have a graywater system, where they use the same water for many different purposes. This is made possible by rinsing the water so that it can be reused, and thus, a lot of water is saved. The earthships are also made of interesting materials - they use car tires filled with sement to build the exterior, and they also have glass in the front for the greenhouse, wherever it is easiest for the sun to reach.

How cool is this? This is actually in Taos. Image source
As volunteers, our group will be a part of building an earthship house, but we don't really know yet whether we will be a part of the late or early part of the process. Personally, I hope we will get there at one of the early stages, because I think I prefer heavy manual labor over slow, detailed work such as painting. I like using my body and pushing myself to my limits, and this is part of why I enjoy service so much. I also think that service leads you to a lot of places that you never would have gone to otherwise. I, for one, can't believe that I get to work on an actual earthship home, something I've only read about previously.

After our stay in Taos, we go to Crestone, and here our trip will become more spiritually focused. We will visit a Buddhist ashram, and a Christian monastery, and we will also do some service work. We will try both yoga and aikido, which I'm really excited about. I don't know if this part of the trip will be as hard physically as our stay in Taos, but I think our stay in Crestone will be much harder emotionally and spiritually. I don't really consider myself a religious person, so it will be interesting to meet people who have devoted their whole lives to practicing their religion. Our leaders, and people who've previously been on this Field Trip, have said repeatedly that you get from it what you put into it, and I will do my very best to be respectful and open-minded, and hopefully, I will get a lot out of this. At the very least, I think it's going to be an interesting experience. I am definitely part of an interesting group, where a lot of the people are international, and it's going to be fun to see not only how we all interact with each other as a group but also how our beliefs will interact with each other in the face of new faiths that might be completely different from our own.

For the last part of the trip, we will do things that in my eyes require little effort but will produce a lot of enjoyment, such as hiking the Great Sand Dunes in Crestone (this is probably where I'll be the happiest that I brought my camera) and visit a Hot Spring Spa. Our very last day will be spent in Santa Fe, just wandering around the city, and I think that if there's ever a time our wallets will be emptied, this is it.

I am really looking forward to experiencing this adventure (also getting off campus for two weeks) and I believe I will learn a lot of things from it. And even though I get to shower and sleep in my bed, it'll probably feel awesome to get back home again.

Lerve,

Ingrid