Monday, December 31, 2007
新年おめでとう! Happy New Year! Gott Nytt År!
Back home in Sweden ... feels great to meet family and friends again yet it feels like I'm a foreigner in my own country, a very strange feeling. Anyway, it's December 31st, Shane and Ärte's birthday, congratulation to you both - one turning 30 and the other one is just six hours old. ^^
Also, it is New Year's Eve and I just wanted to say Happy New Year / Gott Nytt År / 新年快樂 / 新年おめでとう to everyone who has been reading this blog and to all of you I met through 2007.
Love,
Patrik
PS01. I know I've been terribly bad in updating this blog but I'll post some more posts and pics next year of what I did for the last few months in Tokyo and Japan so stay tuned.
PS02. New Year's Resolution 2008: To _complete_ tasks. ^^
Wednesday, December 12, 2007
Goodbye
Vattholma, Sweden 2007-12-11
It's been a great year!! One of the best so far... So much has happened: I learned Japanese, I met Max (the love of my life), I had the chance to live in the coolest city in the world! But the year is soon over and I'm back for Christmas. Back to the grey winter in Sweden, back to my family and friends, back to old routines, but only for a while. Knowing myself, I'm soon off to a new adventure. Maybe the biggest of them all... ;)
Thank you for reading my posts in this blog. This is the last thing I will write here. The next blog is still a mystery, hidden in shadows, but some of the options might be: Tokyo 08, Brussels forever, London in my heart, Diving with Sharks?? I will let you know...
Thank you and goodbye.
/Hanna
It's been a great year!! One of the best so far... So much has happened: I learned Japanese, I met Max (the love of my life), I had the chance to live in the coolest city in the world! But the year is soon over and I'm back for Christmas. Back to the grey winter in Sweden, back to my family and friends, back to old routines, but only for a while. Knowing myself, I'm soon off to a new adventure. Maybe the biggest of them all... ;)
Thank you for reading my posts in this blog. This is the last thing I will write here. The next blog is still a mystery, hidden in shadows, but some of the options might be: Tokyo 08, Brussels forever, London in my heart, Diving with Sharks?? I will let you know...
Thank you and goodbye.
/Hanna
Friday, September 21, 2007
I'M SO EXCITED ... AND I JUST CAN'T HIDE IT!
I'm about to lose control and I think I like it! Ok, guess who is walking around with the biggest smile ever? Me, me, meeeeeee! In exactly ten hours, I'll be in the arrival hall at Narita airport meeting up my family!!!
Smackpuss på er älsklingar!
Smackpuss på er älsklingar!
Tuesday, September 11, 2007
Testing ... testing ... 1 ... 2.
Hey people! Just testing some design stuff on the blog ... as you can see it doesn't go well so I'll be working on it during the week. Hanna and I are busy with school as we have a _huge_ test next Friday but we'll try to upload some new posts pretty soon. Take care!
P.
P.
Tuesday, August 14, 2007
Okinawa
Helllllloooooooo!
I just got back from Okinawa with the darkest tan I've had in my life! But then again, I've spent all time outside in hot sun, snorkeling and DIVING! This is really something I've been dreaming about my whole life, and I'm so happy that I finally took the step to do it. My diving buddy, my darling Maxime, and me made a great team. I'll tell you though; going through all the skills you need to know in case of an emergency (sharing air with your buddy, take your tank and all the equipment of under water, take of your mask in stingy saltwater and put it on and empty it on 18 meters depth) really made med NOT want to dive. The first couple of breaths that I took under water was so horrible that I could not understand how ANYONE could be a diver. But now I am one too... hihi.. The thing that changed was the first dive we did without doing any emergency skills. We just went down, quietly. Slowly floating around on a nice depth of 16 meters, following a sea turtle and avoiding sea snakes. Just very calmly checking the underwater life for about 50 minutes. Fantastic!
When the diving course was done, we traveled up north to IeJima. A very quite countryside Island, almost entirely covered by farms and fields. We rented bikes and stayed at a very friendly hostel. We were almost the first guests, since the hostel opened that very months. We enjoyed a week of friendly staff who drove us around the island, showing us the best secret spots, where we went on bikes later on.
The best part of Ie Jima was the hidden beach we found. No people, only Max and me and some friendly fish.
The weather was fantastic all the time. We did not notice any typhoon, even though typhoons are very common for the season. It was not until we went back to do two last dives before returning home, that the typhoon, with three days of very heavy rain, came.
The last dives was around a cave area called Cape Maeda. The rain was very heavy that day and the staircase of 100 steps heading down the cliff, to the entrance diving point was flooded. It was no longer a staircase, it was a waterfall. It was a little bit scary to walk down and especially back up, with a 20 kg diving equipment on our backs. After 40 minutes swimming under water you are fantastically tired. The sight down at 20 meters, looking up on a surface that was marked by thousands of raindrops spearing the water, was one of the most beautiful things I have ever seen.
Hamby Resort, Chatan, Okinawa. Cheap place to stay if you like free rice and eggs. We managed to come up with lots of different varied breakfasts at this place; eggs and rice natural, eggs and rice with soya sauce, eggs and rice with salt, and Fried eggs and rice... Luckily there was a pretty descent TexMex place around the corner.
The last fantastic dives on the course was at Kerama Islands with colorful coral reeves and lots of fishes (and sea snakes.....brrrrrr) Max on the boat, dressed in wet suit.
I just got back from Okinawa with the darkest tan I've had in my life! But then again, I've spent all time outside in hot sun, snorkeling and DIVING! This is really something I've been dreaming about my whole life, and I'm so happy that I finally took the step to do it. My diving buddy, my darling Maxime, and me made a great team. I'll tell you though; going through all the skills you need to know in case of an emergency (sharing air with your buddy, take your tank and all the equipment of under water, take of your mask in stingy saltwater and put it on and empty it on 18 meters depth) really made med NOT want to dive. The first couple of breaths that I took under water was so horrible that I could not understand how ANYONE could be a diver. But now I am one too... hihi.. The thing that changed was the first dive we did without doing any emergency skills. We just went down, quietly. Slowly floating around on a nice depth of 16 meters, following a sea turtle and avoiding sea snakes. Just very calmly checking the underwater life for about 50 minutes. Fantastic!
When the diving course was done, we traveled up north to IeJima. A very quite countryside Island, almost entirely covered by farms and fields. We rented bikes and stayed at a very friendly hostel. We were almost the first guests, since the hostel opened that very months. We enjoyed a week of friendly staff who drove us around the island, showing us the best secret spots, where we went on bikes later on.
The best part of Ie Jima was the hidden beach we found. No people, only Max and me and some friendly fish.
The weather was fantastic all the time. We did not notice any typhoon, even though typhoons are very common for the season. It was not until we went back to do two last dives before returning home, that the typhoon, with three days of very heavy rain, came.
The last dives was around a cave area called Cape Maeda. The rain was very heavy that day and the staircase of 100 steps heading down the cliff, to the entrance diving point was flooded. It was no longer a staircase, it was a waterfall. It was a little bit scary to walk down and especially back up, with a 20 kg diving equipment on our backs. After 40 minutes swimming under water you are fantastically tired. The sight down at 20 meters, looking up on a surface that was marked by thousands of raindrops spearing the water, was one of the most beautiful things I have ever seen.
Wednesday, August 08, 2007
I'm in New York! - Pt. 2 [HUGE post]
The Saturday after I arrived, Shane brought me to Greenwich Village (a.k.a West Village/The Village) to meet up Dan. I really like The Village and it is, so far, my favourite area in this city. Everyone is just hanging around, there are great shops, cafes, people, whatever and this feels simply like home. Shane and Dan took me to _the_ bakery of all bakeries, 'Magnolia Bakery', where we got some cupcakes and wow, those were awesome, I especially enjoyed the cream on the cupcake. After that we went to the water and then I got introduced to Soho, I guess that area doesn't need any presentation, I were not in a mood for shopping so we just stayed there for around an hour. What I did feel for though, when we went pass the Apple Store, was to touch the iPhone and after playing around a bit with it I do understand why people want it so bad, yet I would wait to buy it until it has a greater space/hard drive and some more functions.
Enough about the techie nerdy stuff and tell more about NYC. Shane had to work for the first week so I've been experiencing most of NYC on my own and I like that, going around wherever I want to go without feeling the need to satisfy anyone else. I went to Ground Zero one day, just by coincidence since I were about to meet up Helen and Shane, I did the same with the Times Square and I felt more excited about the thing that I got there by coincidence then actually feeling excited about Times Square nor Ground Zero, both of them are packed with people and 'I heart NY' t-shirts. ^^ So I've been moving around to all different kind of places and the greatest impact so far, when it comes to buildings and views, is the Brooklyn Bridge. Apart from escaping crazy people on bikes, birds that tried to hit me with their white not-so-fresh-things (one actually did) and avoid listening to my legs that begged me to stop walking (this city makes you walk a lot) I finally took some rest up on the bridge and the view is magnificent; I've seen a lot of pictures of it but to actually be there on the bridge was a totally different kind of experience.
After a few days I had the chance to leave NYC for a while and go to Connecticut and the town Cheshire - one of the hardest words to ever pronounce if you're supposed to pronounce it the American way. My mother has a friend she has been mailing since the 60's so I met her, her name is Judy, and her lovely family starring Laurie, Paul, Jay and last but not least all the cute doggies; Hairy, Frank, Boomer (that's the correct name right Judy?) and Charlie! Judy and Laurie showed me a lot of beautiful and cool places of Connecticut; Harkness Park, the Scandinavian shop in Mystic Village (I felt like I were home for 30 minutes) and a casino which I forgot the name of, Mohegan Dream or something like that. Missed the old ladies sitting in front of the slot machines with their paper cups though, today the slot machines are all too modern for that. Before I left Cheshire I introduced Swedish meatballs with potatoes, lingonberry jam and cream sauce for the family and it seems they are making a great success no matter where in the world you introduce them, they liked them here too. Thanks for a great time all of you, we will be meeting soon again!
So I got back to NYC last Friday and spent the weekend with going to a brunch, seeing a Blonde Redhead concert, experiencing f'uped taxi drivers in yellow cabs, having a nice sip of champagne at the 'Bubble Lounge', studying Japanese (yes, it is true!) and visiting the Guggenheim Museum. I actually went to the Guggenheim yesterday to see the beautiful building but all I saw were a big house being renovated, so I went inside and wow, the architecture is one of is kind, Frank Lloyd Wright did knew how to draw attention. In some way, someone thought that it was sad that I missed the exterior of the Guggenheim so instead I had the chance to find two pair of nice shoes for 50 dollars. In other words, one more thing I can tick off the check list.
So, I gotta go, will be leaving NYC for a few days in Philadelphia, til then ... have a great time all of you!
Love,
P.