Archive for the ‘Travel’ Category

Mandamientos

June 19, 2007

I just saw this on CNN.com and had to post it. See the full article here.

The “Drivers’ Ten Commandments,” as listed by the document, are:

 

1. You shall not kill.

 

2. The road shall be for you a means of communion between people and not of mortal harm.

 

3. Courtesy, uprightness and prudence will help you deal with unforeseen events.

 

4. Be charitable and help your neighbor in need, especially victims of accidents.

 

5. Cars shall not be for you an expression of power and domination, and an occasion of sin.

 

6. Charitably convince the young and not so young not to drive when they are not in a fitting condition to do so.

 

7. Support the families of accident victims.

 

8. Bring guilty motorists and their victims together, at the appropriate time, so that they can undergo the liberating experience of forgiveness.

 

9. On the road, protect the more vulnerable party.

 

10. Feel responsible toward others.

The highlight of the article, “An unusual document from the Vatican’s office for migrants and itinerant people also warned that automobiles can be ‘an occasion of sin’…”

So will priests start hearing, “Forgive me Father, for I seen the back seat of a Smart Car” in confessionals now?

Is that even possible?

Manejar

June 19, 2007

I Google Mapped my drive from CDG to the greater Fonty area, and I don’t think I could draw a more convoluted path if I ingested a blender full of LSD and Magic Mushrooms. Aren’t highways supposed to be straightforward?  I have a few questions regarding the highway system in France, and would greatly appreciate it if a French reader (I know you’re out there) could shed light on the following:

  • How does the toll system work?
  • Are all highways tolled?
    • If so, how frequently?
  • How much do tolls cost?
  • Are toll booths manned, or automated?
    • If automated, are there change machines and are they credit card compatible?
  • Is there a better way from CDG to Fonty other than the 15 step, 8 highway labyrinthine path that Google Maps spits out?
  • Where can I find Carne Asada in Paris?

Obviously, the last question is the most important. Anyone able to point me to a source of decent carne asada in the greater Paris area will be rewarded with a delicious beer. Provided you come to collect it, of course.

Viaje

June 9, 2007
  • Buy a one-way ticket that doesn’t cost as much as a round-trip ticket

Product Information

DTLF
Leave: August XX, 2007

Air Cattle Hold Airlines

Depart: Way too Late PM DTLF’s Friendly Local Int’l Airport (DTLFFLIA)
Arrive :  Way too Early AM Paris Charles De Gaulle (CDG)

Price Per Passenger: $ (O_o) Wait, how much was that?
Quantity: 1
Total Price for all Passengers: $ (x_X) Oh, boy.

I got the first bit done, but not so much the latter. 50% isn’t bad, in my mind, though a wise person once told me that “Close only counts in horseshoes and hand grenades. “

I’ve passed the point of no return. There’s no turning back now. Viva la France.

¿Cuál Es Un Dim Mak?

June 7, 2007

I love you, my INSEAD J08 bloggers, but the seriousness of your recent posts, and all the talk about the 2006 Career Statistics is a bit depressing. So, I bring you another one of DTLF’s infamous, seemingly nonsensical, yet deeply philosophic posts.

For some reason, Hallonman’s post about INSEAD’s Building Business in China course reminded me of this:

And no; I am not a flagrant racist who walks around all day in white sheets, burning crosses or anything. I love my Chinese brothers and sisters as much as I love my own. I just find Cantonese to be a wonderfully colorful language. Every time I hear it, I can’t help but think that a fight is about to break out and that I’ll finally be able to see a real, live Dim Mak.

“What the hewl is a Dim Mak?” you may ask. Let me enlighten you.

I will never leave the ’80s, ever.

Cómo Amo El Acordión

May 30, 2007

I’ve been weighing the costs and benefits of taking a vacation before I leave for Fonty. Is taking a vacation before the madness starts advisable? If so, is the opportunity cost reasonable? Will lounging on the beach of an un-named Latin American country increase my brain (or liver) capacity enough to survive P1/P2?

So in preparation for the possible vacation, I’ve been paying extra special attention in mis clases del Español, just in case I have to usar lo. For an added dose of Español, I’ve removed all local language music from my car, and replaced it with ranchera. The lyrics are slowly starting to make sense and I’m picking up more and more, namely the oft appearing mi corazon, mi amor, and, my favorite of the week, Prefiero morir / Si aqui tu no estas.” Well, the ranchera cantantes definitely get an A+ in the subtlety department.

How’s everyone’s housing and visa logistics coming along? I’ve noticed a trend towards more-than-mild anxiety and light panic developing on NetVestibule, and don’t know whether to chime in with “The sky is falling!” or continue to put off everything I know I should be doing.

Naranja

May 17, 2007

Today, we’ll be addressing the sun-kissed ( very punny, no?) golden globe of goodness known as the orange. Actually, this post is about fruit in general, but I had to work in my daily dose of alliteration somewhere and figured I’d just get it over with, just like how I keep telling myself I’ll go to the gym in the mornings and get it over with so the guilt doesn’t latch on to my svelte legs, dragging me down during the day like a clingy ex-boy/girl friend who just won’t let go.

Onward, to fruit.

I like to eat fruit. Juicy fruit, citrus-y fruit and thirst-quenching fruit in particular. I try to consume at least one serving of fruit a day, if not more, just like Dr. Bowel ordered. In my travels, I’ve encountered the a broad spectrum of fruit purveyors, from the sweat-soaked wife-beater clad Chinese street hawker pushing a wooden handcart that wouldn’t look out of place in 16th century Hangzhou, to the sparkling waxy-clean American supermarket where pimply, underpaid high school kids in over sized aprons “mist” the produce every hour to give it an appearance of freshness. My favorites thus far (and by favorite, I mean favorite like the kitschy knit sweaters you always see kids in cheesy movies complaining about getting from grandma for Christmas, but for which I harbored a secret desire because nothing screams oh-so-soft like hand-knit yarn) have been the little mom-and-pop European markets and fruit stands.

Fruit at these establishments is lovingly laid out for your ocular pleasure. You, or I, really, can’t help but leer at the little pyramids of ruby red apples, bunches of bananas that are just yellow enough so that the bitter raw taste is gone and just the right size so you’re not overly bloated or yearning for more after consuming one stem, and of course the bushel of delicious oranges.

My first encounter with European Fruit Etiquette was in Italy. After disembarking from one of those horrendous overnight train rides where I shared a cabin with 5 other shower-averse travelers, I was aching for something thirst quenching and remotely healthy. Of course, the only thing I could think of that satisfied those two requirements was an orange. Mmm. There was no way in hell I’d fish through my unisex money receptacle for cash to buy anything in Roma Termini – that dark den of iniquity, teeming with dirty rotten scoundrels and Carbeneri, which as far as I’m concerned, are one in the same – so I decided to trudge to my hostel on foot.

Along the way, I spied the aforementioned shrine-like display of fruit. Oh, joyous day. La Virgen must have been watching over me. I lunged for an orange, and before my grimy, foreign hands reached its soft, familiar, pockmarked rind, I was blown back by a stream of invective, in Italian, of course. Shocked but not dissuaded, and convinced that the mustachioed proprietor couldn’t be talking to me, I went in again. Don Corleone be damned; nothing was going to stand between me and my pulp intake. Making a second pass at the orange yielded a very angry Italian man who seemed to have no respect for personal space, as he was literally inches from my face, yelling and wildly gesticulating as Italians are apt to do. Tangentially, I noticed that my map doohickey hasn’t displayed any Italian IP addresses. After this post, I don’t expect any. But I do love your culture, country, food, and well-dressed tasty tasty people. Anyhow, I passed on the orange and opted for a shower instead.

This incident repeated itself about three more times before I figured it out through some stealthy market reconnaissance, or as much reconnaissance a stranger in a strange land can do without looking like they’re casing a place. Apparently, in Spain, Italy and some places in France, fruit that seems to be laid out for purchase is actually not. It’s just there for you, the consumer, to look at. And if, god forbid, you’d like to buy some, you’d have to get the attention of proprietors who are on you like a vulture on roadkill as soon as you step within a 10 meter radius of their store, but are nowhere to be found when you want their help. Bottom line: only the people who “own” the fruit can lay their grubby paws on it, and that means NO SOUP, err, FRUIT FOR YOU.

I can’t wait to live with European efficiency again.