dudes! i just bought a car!!! it's a 2006 Scion xa, gets up to 40mpg with standard driving (which puts hypermiling potential above sixty!!) It's a four door hatchback which means you all will be super comfortable in it, and the total cost is less than one semester of the tuition i'm not paying for!!! It should be almost completely paid off by the time I graduate, and it only has 30,000 miles on it! It's kind of funky looking, like it's trying to be a smaller version of the smaller version of the SUV, but it's going to LAST. And the best part? If i fold down the back seats...I can sleep it in!! And that's all I could ever ask for. :-) I can't wait to see you guys!
http://www.scionlife.com/scion/xa/RS3.jpg
http://www.edmunds.com/scion/xa/2006/consumerreview.html
Thursday, July 24, 2008
Friday, July 18, 2008
Thursday Night Lights
Monday night I left Peoria for LaGrange (which is a Chicago suburb) with a friend of mine to visit a friend (Nate) up there. We've done some big fun thing each day.
Tuesday: Brookfield Zoo
Nate works there this summer as a tour guide, so we got the scoop on all the animals. Zoos are pretty fly anyway, but Brookfield is one of the top zoos of the nation, so it was cool. I hadn't been to a zoo in quite some time. We have one back in Peoria, but on a scale of 1-10, it kind of blows.
Wednesday: Shed Aquarium
There were fish and other aquatic animals. Nothing too terribly awesome because we would have had to pay extra for really cool stuff, which we didn't want to do. We were spoiled by Nate because him working at the zoo got us into other things for free.
Thursday: Field Museum
Way awesome. One exhibit they have right now is about mythical creatures and their potential origins in different cultures. I found out that in China, the phoenix is a symbol for peace and good times. Not the reason I got it (since I didn't know that last year), but I thought it was very fitting and have chosen to take it as a sign.
Thursday night was the main point of this post. My friend who I drove up to Chicago with left, and after he did, Nate had me go on a jog with him. (I rode a bike while he jogged.) What the prick didn't tell me before we began was that it would be 10 miles. I wasn't really mad at him because you can't really be mad at Nate for anything, but I was slightly perturbed. Then we turned onto this path out of his neighborhood and were in the woods by a large creek, and I could see literally hundreds of lights, flashing like paparazzi. They were lightening bugs. I don't know how it is where you all are staying, but there has been a noticeable decline in the lightening bug population in Peoria throughout my childhood years, so this was a very special sight for me. It was so peaceful in the woods and it was so beautiful. All there was to see was the long reaching shadows of the trees, the flashes of the lightening bugs, and the occasional ray of moonlight through the leaves, but it was beautiful.
Right now I'm in Boston for Oxfam CHANGE Leader training. I just arrived this morning and will be here until July 25th. This is my last planned adventure for the summer, and I am glad for it. I don't mind being away from home or being home for long periods at a time, but it's hard for me to keep adjusting when I'm gone for one week, home for two, gone a few days, etc. Not that I'm complaining; I've had quite a good time on the trips I've taken this summer. I just like to feel grounded somewhere.
I pray that life continues to treat you all well!
~cocoa_goddess
how's that, david?
Tuesday: Brookfield Zoo
Nate works there this summer as a tour guide, so we got the scoop on all the animals. Zoos are pretty fly anyway, but Brookfield is one of the top zoos of the nation, so it was cool. I hadn't been to a zoo in quite some time. We have one back in Peoria, but on a scale of 1-10, it kind of blows.
Wednesday: Shed Aquarium
There were fish and other aquatic animals. Nothing too terribly awesome because we would have had to pay extra for really cool stuff, which we didn't want to do. We were spoiled by Nate because him working at the zoo got us into other things for free.
Thursday: Field Museum
Way awesome. One exhibit they have right now is about mythical creatures and their potential origins in different cultures. I found out that in China, the phoenix is a symbol for peace and good times. Not the reason I got it (since I didn't know that last year), but I thought it was very fitting and have chosen to take it as a sign.
Thursday night was the main point of this post. My friend who I drove up to Chicago with left, and after he did, Nate had me go on a jog with him. (I rode a bike while he jogged.) What the prick didn't tell me before we began was that it would be 10 miles. I wasn't really mad at him because you can't really be mad at Nate for anything, but I was slightly perturbed. Then we turned onto this path out of his neighborhood and were in the woods by a large creek, and I could see literally hundreds of lights, flashing like paparazzi. They were lightening bugs. I don't know how it is where you all are staying, but there has been a noticeable decline in the lightening bug population in Peoria throughout my childhood years, so this was a very special sight for me. It was so peaceful in the woods and it was so beautiful. All there was to see was the long reaching shadows of the trees, the flashes of the lightening bugs, and the occasional ray of moonlight through the leaves, but it was beautiful.
Right now I'm in Boston for Oxfam CHANGE Leader training. I just arrived this morning and will be here until July 25th. This is my last planned adventure for the summer, and I am glad for it. I don't mind being away from home or being home for long periods at a time, but it's hard for me to keep adjusting when I'm gone for one week, home for two, gone a few days, etc. Not that I'm complaining; I've had quite a good time on the trips I've taken this summer. I just like to feel grounded somewhere.
I pray that life continues to treat you all well!
~cocoa_goddess
how's that, david?
Thursday, July 17, 2008
So, that's that annnd
no harm done.
People, I am in a foreign country taking classes, and I update more than you!
Honestly!
Today I finished the journal I began at the very start of the trip. I am sitting here in the Knowledge Center with a bar of Toblerone.
One thing I need to say about Turkey is that they are not uptight people. They also don't really follow any rules.
For example, we went to a mosque one day (by now I think, 'Mosque, DULL') and after we finished the visit, putting our shoes back on, we saw a sign that said, 'Sitting on the steps is strictly forbidden.' Naturally, about fifty people were sitting on the steps. And the sign was in English and Turkish.
It's very freeing to be in a place where people are just over being so (BU-REA)ucratic and paper-oriented in everything they do, and so they just stopped.
We in the U.S. have yet to reach this awesome state of existence. If the people were just like, 'F thıs W2 form,' it would be effed!
Honestly.
Okay, well so much more to tell you all. Or most of you.
The End
People, I am in a foreign country taking classes, and I update more than you!
Honestly!
Today I finished the journal I began at the very start of the trip. I am sitting here in the Knowledge Center with a bar of Toblerone.
One thing I need to say about Turkey is that they are not uptight people. They also don't really follow any rules.
For example, we went to a mosque one day (by now I think, 'Mosque, DULL') and after we finished the visit, putting our shoes back on, we saw a sign that said, 'Sitting on the steps is strictly forbidden.' Naturally, about fifty people were sitting on the steps. And the sign was in English and Turkish.
It's very freeing to be in a place where people are just over being so (BU-REA)ucratic and paper-oriented in everything they do, and so they just stopped.
We in the U.S. have yet to reach this awesome state of existence. If the people were just like, 'F thıs W2 form,' it would be effed!
Honestly.
Okay, well so much more to tell you all. Or most of you.
The End
Thursday, July 10, 2008
Trash Peters


Looking forward to getting back to KY.
Libby
Wednesday, July 9, 2008
Just to save you from any distress
There was a terrorist attack at the U.S. Consulate here today. Three gunmen attacked and killed three Turkish guards who, in turn, killed the gunmen. No one has taken responsibility for the attack, but it has been condemned in newspapers throughout the Middle-East. We have been told to lay low for a time. Our campus is far enough outside of the city, so we are alright. The attack was on the European side anyway.
SO I am fine and stuff. It's too bad about the guards, but I'm glad the gunmen got what they deserved.
Turkey is treating us well, and we are telling people we are from Toronto. So far, most people speak French or German to me when they are trying to sell me things, so I am flattered.
Okay folks, you'll have to wait for the full report. I write every day in a book about this place, so you won't miss a detail. That might be a bad thing, depending on how much you care.
Okay, peace.
SO I am fine and stuff. It's too bad about the guards, but I'm glad the gunmen got what they deserved.
Turkey is treating us well, and we are telling people we are from Toronto. So far, most people speak French or German to me when they are trying to sell me things, so I am flattered.
Okay folks, you'll have to wait for the full report. I write every day in a book about this place, so you won't miss a detail. That might be a bad thing, depending on how much you care.
Okay, peace.
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