Weekly-ish Correspondence
Tuesday, May 22, 2012
It helps a lot to get updates from friends and family, and anyone else that cares to email me.
No more one-way blog posts. I am switching to email correspondence, and hope you will send me an update on your life, your day, some story (good or bad), or anything else.
ahessert@gmail.com
Tuesday, May 15, 2012
Tuesday, May 1, 2012
Monday, April 30, 2012
Monday, April 16, 2012
I didn’t listen to the address I was given, and screwed up the street name when I got in the cab. I reaffirmed the incorrect destination when the driver repeated it. “Near the center, right?” “Yeah sure.” After an hour of São Paulo traffic I finally got a text message with the street name number of the hotel I was going to for a Notre Dame Club of São Paulo dinner. The actual street was in the neighborhood that we had just passed. I let the cab driver know that the street we agreed to before was wrong and we did a U-turn. I watched the meter click for 15 minutes as we moved 50 feet. I saw that we were two kilometers away and decided to pay, get out and walk.
I attentively dodged the motorcycles that were riding down between the four jammed lanes and cursed the rain that caused my ride to bail earlier in the day. There was a downpour that blocked the tunnels of the city and made it impossible to swing by my neighborhood on the way. I was on my own.
It is amazing how predictable the São Paulo weather is and yet it is still one of the leading topics of conversation along with traffic. The mornings are sunny and cool, then as the sun gets more fierce the humidity shoots up and makes going out to get lunch a very sweaty ordeal. I hope lunch didn’t run too late because at about 3:30 the weather gets tired of how sleepy everyone is, and turns the city into a freaking hurricane. Then everyone prays that the afternoon downpour doesn’t roll into rush hour.
I am on my way back to Rio at the moment, and had a great week in São Paulo. I did some work, had a barbecue, went to two famous soccer stadiums for a samba concert and a movie premier, went to a home for at-risk children, ate some great food, and got caught in the rain.
I have determined that I prefer Rio to São Paulo, due to the size difference and the beach, I prefer smaller cities and I am looking forward to getting back into the water.
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
I am writing this on the bus to São Paulo, riding through green rolling hills and mountains. Seeing the huge landscape and lush tropical forest has helped me relax and think for the past few hours. I receive such a calm when I get into a vehicle and take my seat. At that point there is nothing else I can do, and I am going somewhere. I feel like I am escaping the crowd and craziness of life in Rio as I am headed to a city with 23 or however many millions of people São Paulo has. I envision myself returning refocused and ready to take on my job.
Holy week allowed me to try and focus my time on faith and prayer, which was a great way for me to connect with people from this culture, feel part of a group, and also to ask for patience in my day to day and long term operations down here. I went to the church on the evening of Good Friday hoping to run into a mass or at least get some quiet time with the hundreds of other people that would be flowing in and out to do the same. I ended up sitting there for about an hour amongst the quiet crowd, almost getting up to leave multiple times, but telling myself I had nothing else to do and that it was good for me to sit quietly and think (or unthink).
Well I was lucky that I stayed because now I have some culture to write about on this blog! I heard a noise outside and everybody all of a sudden got up and walked to the back of the church, outside there were hundreds of people lighting candles in the main street that was just closed off. There was a line of young people carry banners representing the stations of the cross, and as an old lady handed me a candle a group came out of the church with Jesus on the ten foot cross that was up at the alter.
Of course you could not have a faith filled Brazilian procession without music coming out of truck carrying huge speakers. A thousand strong walked down the main road with people in every apartment looking down at us on each side. As the voice from the speakers lead the stations of the cross in prayer and song we took a turn towards the beach, and came across another army of Catholics led by a bigger truck meeting us at a platform overlooking the water. I would have to say we, the Ipanema crew, had the advantage with the bishop leading our group under the cover of a golden cloth canopy carried by faithful followers.
They mounted the cross on the platform and the Catholics of Copacabana brought a statue of the Virgin Mary and set her looking up at her son. The leaders of the groups and the bishop led the last station and everyone sang as a robed group lowered Jesus from the cross and placed him in a wooden casket.
With half the candles still lit and a lot of melted plastic cups we walked back to the church where there was a slow motion mob rush to reach the casket holding Jesus, give your donation, and say a prayer.
It was cool.
Thursday, April 5, 2012
I haven’t really gone anywhere exceptional. I have been dealing with an ear infection and a pain in the butt translating assignment for CIESPI, but both recently took big steps in the process of being resolved.
The one thing I am actually getting excited about is reading and learning (woohoo!). I am very glad my job is at a university. Lot of good NYTimes articles are forcing me to pay the 99cent monthly web-subscription. Leaving the U.S. has had the funny effect of making me care more about what is going on there. Yet I am still very worldly in my choice of literature.
Sorry I haven’t gone on any worldwind adventures. We will see what happens when I start going into the favelas for my work. In the meantime, I will try to be more observant.