Aloha!

I’ve made a BOAT load of friends! lol I think my puns are funny but they definitely aren’t.

Anyway. Since I last wrote we’ve had our first pub night. It was very similar to my first middle school dance: awkward and chaperoned. Since we are in the Bahama waters you only need to be 18 in order to have your few glasses of wine, so it was interesting to say the least.

Today we arrived in Hawaii! I had a field lab, which is a class field trip, so I didn’t get to do anything super fun. We toured several of the royal homes and areas. My class is the anthropology  of tourism so we are studying how Hawaii presents itself to the vacationers and what tourists look for in their “Hawaiian paradise”. The field lab was focused on visiting Hawaiian tour stops that the native Hawaiians want their tourists to see, aka the historic sites, instead of the stereotypical Waikiki beach visit. It was interesting but exhausting. We sang some traditional luau songs and pretended like we were Lilo and Stitch. YAY!

Before every port we have a cultural pre-port and Hawaii’s was especially insulting. We got lectured on how we need to treat the land with care and “remember to bring out manners” because American’s have a poor reputation. I’m sorry but is Hawaii not part of America? Anyway, the pre-ports are interesting because we learn facts about the country. For example, it is against the law to touch the turtles in Hawaii. Also, in Hawaiian culture, keeping land in the family is so important that people call their aunts and uncles mom and dad and their cousins brother and sister- weird.

Overall, Hawaii consisted of making as many phone calls as possible, ensuring everyone got the perfect instagram post, and restocking snacks. It is off to Japan where the real journey begins. We have 10-11 days at sea before we arrive in Yokohama. I have attached some pictures of the boat and Hawaii, as promised!

Meryl and I are keeping a running list of funny/interesting things that are happening so I thought I’d share some with you.

1. The very first day we had a mandatory lifeboat drill that was super quiet and serious. I, of course, couldn’t stop fidgeting and ate it on the deck. I fell to the ground with a loud bang, all of which felt nothing but typical for me. It was awkward but funny considering no-one understood me at the time. Meryl died laughing, and that’s when we decided we liked each other.

2. The to-go coffee cups on the ship have HANDLES!! This is a brilliant invention, and I’m not sure why it hasn’t caught on in the United States.

3. The lady of the speaker announcements keeps threatening us saying that a  Komodo dragon will eat us if we don’t stop walking through an area of the boat we aren’t supposed to. She finds it very amusing and even includes that they have been “starving it so that it is hungry for students”. I swear we are treated like small children…

4. Every Vietnamese word is one syllable.

5. The Hawaiian language only has 13 letters, one of which is a backwards apostrophe

I accidentally made friends with girls from Michigan, not sure how to feel about it.
MAHALO!! (thank you) for reading my blog!!

Caliii baby

We made it safely to San Diego, and that is a miracle. I had mom schedule our tickets on the wrong day, meaning we would land after the ship left (lol oops) but hallelujiah for the man at Delta. He was from one of the countries I’m visiting in Africa and was more than willing to help- thank god.

It is sort of weird being here with everyone and their families. The hotel is super busy and you can tell everyone is nervous and excited. It doesn’t really feel real yet. It definitely hasn’t registered that after tonight I will be living on a boat for 3 1/2 months, but I’m sure it will sink in soon enough (no pun intended). I am doing a work study as a sort of scholarship, so I leave on the first bus at 7am tomorrow to board for our work orientation. I’ll be working in the library! I figured it would be the easiest, even though I haven’t actually read a full book since Freshman year of high school… I’m sort of excited for the job, but my twelve year old sister handled it differently. She thinks its nerdy and is afraid people may think I’m a loser. She sent me a confidence boosting email last night. It was short and sweet: “Don’t let them sorry ass snob kids get you down for being a librarian. <3” Thank you Erica. I will try my best.

Anyway, California is beautiful, and I can’t wait to see Hawaii. I got chills just looking at the ship in the harbor. HOMEEE!! I met my roommate today after a series of inevitably awkward ‘where do you wanna meet’ sort of facebook chats, and she was awesome! (also thank god)

Everyone is posting in our facebook group about meeting in the lobby to hangout (hahah no.) I don’t understand. Do you just walk down and sorta wander around talking to strangers? This is something I am way too awkward for. Usually Jenna or Seema start all of the talking when we meet new people (hi guys COME SAVE ME). When we went to dinner, I passed all these strangely outgoing individuals and cringed at the idea of having to maybe do this eventually. I therefore clung to my mom and spoke to no one. Hopefully I get better at this tomorrow? Probably not.

Well, I have to wake up early and say goodbye to the main land. Thanks for everyone that read my first post. It was suggested that I post an itinerary so I have below. Also, there is a link to my program if you’re interested in learning more.

San Diego, CA, USA

Honolulu, Hawaii, USA

Yokohama, Japan

Kobe, Japan

Shanghai, China

Hong Kong, China

Ho Chi Minh City, Viet Nam

Rangoon, Burma

Cochin, India

Port Louis, Mauritius

Cape Town, South Africa

Takoradi, Ghana

Tema, Ghana

Casablanca, Morocca

London, England

http://www.semesteratsea.org/voyages/spring-2016/