25 February 2009

Carneval in Diamantina

Carrrrnewow!

So, first of all, I didn`t stay in any of the famous places like Rio, Salvador or even Olinda. Instead I ended up in Diamantina with a group of crazy Germans. It was lots of fun and a new experience. Diamantina is a small historic miner`s city, very beautiful but normally rather unexciting. This however changes when its time for carvenal! Most of the local croud get out of the city, make sure they don`t leave anything in their flats so that they can rent them to plenty, plenty of mostly young Brazilians who are coming to town to party almost straight for five days... It`s a crazy, chaotic mess that starts in your room (7 people in one little room), grows in the flat (one bathroom for 25 people, no real kitchen, only beer, chachaca and caipirinha to drink) and expands to the streets, other apartments and whereever the wave of madness takes you!

08 February 2009

Travelling through time and stuff...

In São Paulo everybody has a tatoo, but this one is the coolest!

Yesterday I arrived at São Paulo and was immediately won by this city. Contrary to my expectations it didn’t feel too crowded, violent and menacing. Well, I am also lucky because I stay in the center where I can most of the things on foot and yesterday we only went to really cool, relaxed places: the Museo do Arte do São Paulo, a little street fair with good old live Samba music and after some caipirinhas with different cachaças we walked to a great samba funk dance club only three blocks away. Perfect and long day!
While enjoying our Caipirinhas at Kiki’s place, I felt glad to be with so smart international students again because several interesting discussions arouse... I learned about the complex political situation in Columbia (despite the Colombian parapolitics scandal president Uribe is still popular), we were discussing the ideal government term (are 4 years enough to make a change but if not how many years should a political leader run a country?) and finally touched down at the number one topic: globalization. No new insights but I got the hint to watch a good little educative movie about the story of stuff. If you haven`t seen it yet, check it out! I learned some new things for example that in the US 99% of the purchased products become trash after 6 months. Even if the numbers aren´t totally correct, this is really scary. And then I reflected my present trip and realized that my stuff comes and goes. I have already broken one camera, lost a cell phone (after 3 days!), have been stolen a bike, trashed one pair of shoes, given away three books and received three books in return, bought 5 shirts and lost 2 and so on and so on. It is really not easy to limit your stuff yet be prepared for all kinds of different situations while travelling for 6 months. Well, it´s easy if your are very disciplined... By the way, this reminds me of a great Brazilian movie I saw this week: The man who defeated the devil is a poetic film about a fearleass man travelling through northeast Brazil. He is riding on his horse with nothing more than what he´s wearing experiencing the most amazing adventures. This guy is definitely my hero!