Category Archives: Travel

Turkey

So grateful I decided to wear this lovely orange tie-dye t-shirt from our school Lorax Musical for this trip.
Greek for “Sophia” which means wisdom. Taken at the Ephesus Archaeological Site in the Library of Celsus.
One of the things I love about traveling to foreign countries is seeing what kind of animals are there. Turkey was definitely a cat country. This was where we had thousand dollar french fries (lira).
Can you tell I was excited to be meeting up with my cousins and Aunt Deb at the train station?
Got to love the wrap-around sunglasses and cargo shorts look.
Gentry and me and a model Trojan Horse.
Playing group “solitaire,” at the airport before the flight home.

Hawaii

Quinci was able to accompany Sage, Jake, and me to Hawaii over Thanksgiving break.

Amsterdam & London

Netherlands.

Thailand

“What do tigers dream of, when they take a little tiger snooze?”
The hat reads: I ❤ Phucket.
Private villa with a pool. $400/night. You can’t get a decent room in the US in 2024 for under $600 a night anymore.

Innate VS Learned

I love this photo of little Sophie, holding hands with an Aboriginal girl in Australia. Not only am I wearing the most ridiculous outfit (my mom let me dress myself as a child) but, having no memory or anecdotes to suggest otherwise, I like to think of this as evidence for how children are born nondiscriminatory. While I can’t speak for the other little girl, it appears that I didn’t notice or care about our differences, all I saw was a potential friend to play with, and seized the opportunity.

In high school a student names Brock from Adelaide, Australia came to stay for awhile. I showed him the picture and told him about how my dad still played didgeridoo for us on occasion, etc. He proceeded to tell me about how terrible the discriminating against native Aboriginal people was, and it forever changed how I saw this photo.

On a totally separate note: My dad’s favorite memory from Sydney was when he tried to order a martini, and they responded they were “all out of martini.”

The Philippines

When I was in college I had the opportunity to travel to the Philippines with my friend Izzara, who was from Cebu. Our friendship started with one of those small world moments; it turned out that she knew one of my old friends Shuta from boarding school, and she had gone to boarding school where my cousin Nicola went (Suffield Academy, in CT), and after this discovery we became quick friends over curly fries with mustard. She invited me to come visit her over Winter Break, so after a quick trip through Amsterdam with my two older siblings, Sage and Gentry, and an even quicker stop in London for New Years with my mom, I flew to Manilla. It was a very exciting trip, especially because I knew nothing about the Philippines before going. I ate baby eel at a Spanish restaurant and learned about historical Spanish occupation of the Philippines, and how that was why it was a predominantly catholic country. I ate balut (fertalized duck egg) from a street cart. I ate freshly caught uni straight from the ocean on a catamaran. We attended Sinulog Festival, swam with whale sharks.

I didn’t get any great photos of myself with said whale sharks, but I did have the scare of my life while trying.

Before they take you out in the canoes, there is a mandatory training video which basically just entailed threats of imprisonment if you touched the whale sharks. It brought to mind the story of that American tourist that got caned in Singapore. Izzara had also cautioned me early on about the way things worked in the Philippines; for example, if a driver struck a pedestrian the incentive structure was such that it made more sense (fiscally speaking) to back up and finish the job and pay for a funeral, than to call an ambulance and risk paying the medical bills.

Anyhow I signed on the dotted line and slid my snorkeling gear into place. Having only been snorkeling once or twice before, I was struggling with a foggy mask, treading water, and preoccupied with my underwater camera gear. I was admiring a baby whale shark in front of me when my fin makes contact with something hard. Before I even have time to register that I had kicked a whale shark, that despite their massive size can apparently sneak up from under you, a set of brawny arm lifts me fully out of the water in a single motion, and deposits me brusquely back in the canoe. I don’t even remember what he said because sheer panic had started to over take me, third world prison bars flashing behind my eyes, but I know that it was curt, like “watch out,” but that I also wasn’t in trouble — thank heavens!

Mittelbergheim, Alsace France

View from the house in France.

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Tahitian Church

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I did a really cool wooden block print with hot wax of this beautiful old church we drove past on my spring break abroad trip to Tahiti in high school. The highlight of this trip, aside from the delicious food (pain coco, fresh papaya with lime, and poisson cru), was the fact that there was a tsunami warning while we were there.

Me and my freshman year roommate were staying with the same host family. They came into our room in the middle of the night and woke us up to let us know that Emily’s mom had called them concerned because of the warning. I was groggy but I had my priorities straight. I announced that my shorts were hang drying on the clothes line outside, shrugged, then promptly fell back asleep.

In a close second, was when I forced Emily to apply aloe (very delicately) all over my naked body while I stood in front of a fan because I had 2nd degree sunburns on 80% of my body from snorkeling without sunscreen.

Third place goes to swimming with and feeding sharks and rays while I was on my period. The rays were hilarious. Their mouths are on their bottom side, so when they present their mouth for food it’s like they a flapping trying to hug you.

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Tomorrow’s Voters

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