Church in downtown Asunción, Paraguay

FOREWORD: My mind insisted that the remote and complex nation of Paraguay make a blog appearance. From the northern Argentine border near Formosa to the multi-cultural tri-border at Iguazu Falls, my five days of zig-zagging bus travel were much too quick to gain any deep understanding of this land-locked island within the South American continent, but I did have a lot of fun skimming across its surface. Below are a few descriptions of my first day in Paraguay, each written in reverse chronological order and purposefully limited to one paragraph.

Trevor and Nardi (and Falcor)

August 13th [9:28pm - Grilling with friend Nardi and her parents] – Tonight I gained a family and two new friends: the Spanish-only Nardi version, the same who picked me up in her used Mercedes hours after I Facebooked her that I was in town; and the Guarani-edition Nardi, the one who chirps undecipherable happy sounds and smiles more as a result. Years ago Nardi and I met in Texas while she was working as an au pair. We spoke Spanish when alone; English when with others. I remember the atmosphere of a conversation we once had but not the conversation itself—weightless words just bounced between us. During a pause in which not only the human face but the whole body tells the other it’s their turn to speak, I looked at her, really looked at her, then realized her reality up to our Texas days was completely foreign to me and that I’d never have stumbled into this realization if she hadn’t come from a country that, at the time, I considered exotic and other-worldly. Funny, now that I’m in her backyard grilling with her parents I feel like I’ve both met her for the first time and known her forever.

August 13th [3:oopm - Walking around Asunción historic center] – Everything is new, which means everything is exciting. I’m a baby again slobbering open-mouthed at the excesses of the world, tasting them as if everything was candy and nothing poison, pulling all senses through holes in my head. It’s warmer here, greener by default. Floating upward to the park’s leafy and bladed canopies my eyes search for colorful, warm-blooded parrots to confirm, beyond a doubt, that the light reflected reversed and uprighted inside their retinas is, indeed, tropical. Ears: I don’t understand the murmured Guarani in the streets, and it surprises me more than it should that the language of the Old World Spanish empire was dominated into disuse by the better humored, more fluid, less logical ratatat of a jungle people who, for centuries,—and now I’m letting my imagination run wild—shot their long syllables like arrows through dense bush, hoping they’d fall into the ears of other friendly tribes scattered along the Paraguay River. That, or Guarani is revenge against their European invaders, an indomitable and repeated cry against the insulting idea that their people could be enslaved. Mouth: a street vendor who sells pottery in the park accentuated his respond to my question by ashing his cigarette and staring deeply into my eyes, “We don’t have traditional food,” then politely directed me to a nearby cafe with outdoor tables where I ordered ravioli and a Coke.

Rusty rooftops and the Paraguay River in the distance

August 13th [10:15am - Taking public bus across Asunción] – It looked like a hot dog stand but its business was clearly written in block red letters: “We buy hair.” Right there on the street corner. Portuguese billboards peddled fine Brazilian lingerie from above the rusty rooftops of shantytowns in dusty fields; Chinese symbols on storefronts mingled, every other building, with Arabic scratches and cartoon Aladdins on restaurants that appeared to mark a hodgepodge Lebanese or Syrian community, or perhaps it was the Chinese acting Arabic to expand their influence into yet another Latin American capital, neighborhood by neighborhood. Globalization speaks all squiggles fluently. The Asunción streets are pulsing metal, push-carts and pick-ups that slowly come undone as ill-fitted screws bounce around their over-sized holes. Black clouds shoot from exhaust pipes when buses shift gears, and no one bothers to cover their mouth or finds this temporary loss of the sun offensive, as if being personally eclipsed was as normal as ordering a milkshake from McDonald’s drive-thru atop a wooden horse carriage.

August 12th [9:05pm - Looking for hotel near bus station] – One-hundred-seventy-nine-thousand guaranis? Thank you. One-hundred-forty-thousand guaranis? Thanks. Forty-thousand guaranis to stay in your home? Great, thanks, but I’m going to check just one more place first. Twenty-five-thousand guaranis? A shared bathroom with cold water only? I’ll take it. Six-dollars-fifty-cents to sleep.

August 12th [7:4opm - Taking van from Argentine Border to downtown Asunción] – Ten of the fifteen passengers were men, many missing teeth and all speaking Guarani while the eyes in their motionless heads darted from speaker to speaker. The conversation was gently pulled instead of pushed from lungs, hushed to a respectful volume, then muted more so as not to unfocus the women and children who sat facing forward, dutifully watching the road. Learn through observation. I was visiting Paraguay on a whim. With no real plan, no real destination, and an exchange rate quoted from an illegal taxi driver selling counterfeit currency, I studied my fellow passengers like a guidebook, hoping to learn something, anything. They twitched with the toe taps and bouncing knees so common to men who use their bodies like tools, those who’d feel guilty earning a living any other way than manual labor. Their dirty faces and oily work shirts were open pages. I learned, without words between us, that these fathers played with their children, that they were as honest as they were tired from long hours of underpaid work, that not one would have protested or sighed impatiently if I’d have asked to pull over to pee in the ditch.

Sign at the Paraguayan border

August 12th [6:35pm - Visa issues exiting Argentina and entering Paraguay] – I fell into their trap, walked straight through the front door, drank the mango juice put in my hand. The Paraguayan officials’ constant friendliness seemed like a trick, like water-drip torture to obtain a confession. Their kindness was filling waterboarding buckets and charging electrodes. And I just smiled, not knowing what to expect. “You don’t have a visa?” Based on my treatment, I decided to fight niceness with honesty. “No, sir, I didn’t know I needed one.” A pause. “Well, don’t worry, we can solve this.” I loved Paraguay before even setting foot on its soil. Minutes before, in the same building in this no-man’s-land of bureaucracy, the Argentine officials had used more traditional torture techniques (e.g. humility) to punish me for overstaying my welcome in their holy jurisdiction. They laughed annoyingly at my honest mistake: that three months equalled ninety days, the maximum time tourists are allowed in-country. “Three months are not always 90 days,” repeated one official with arms-crossed while squinting out the window as if trying to remember which months were also illegally over their allotted time. “These three months are 92 days,” he said, emphasizing all the wrong syllables. I left Argentina with a US$80 fine and entered Paraguay on a 72-hour transit visa that I was told could probably be extended; and if not, not to worry: “Someone will help you find a solution.”

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Beginning bike tour in Cartagena, Colombia

(Buenos Aires, Argentina) Moments before passing the handlebars and watching that neon yellow fade down the sidewalk, snake-like below so many busy feet, Bob & Surly made me promise I’d shed no tears, not then, not now. And definitely not months later when I’d upload their photos to announce to the world they had decided to pedal the long way home—from Ushuaia, Argentina to Alaska, U.S.A—whereas I’d board a plane and wake up wiping our adventure clean like sleep from my eyes.

Months later, my eyes are dry; a promise is a promise. But I miss those sarcastic metal bastards. We’ve been through too much to goodbye and walk (pedal) away without glancing back over our memories’ shoulder. Ten thousand kilometers and two years are just long enough to realize who your true friends really are.

New Bob & Surly pilots, Javier and Gigi

As I now sadly and reluctantly pull up the past, Bob and Surly are gearing up for another adventure. They’ve joined forces with Argentine couple Javier and Gigi, two bicycle enthusiasts with whom they’ll retrace the Andean spine all the way to its glacial beginnings in the flat Alaskan tundra.

During a Buenos Aires Critical Mass event, Surly spotted the couple in the sea of bikes, flashed a carsalesman smile, then immediately sold himself for top dollar after convincing them to quit their jobs to pedal the Americas. By noon the following day, Surly had also duped the couple into paying cold cash for Team MB&S’s hard-to-find, barely-used camp and cook gear, packaging himself into an all-or-nothing sale he dubbed, “The Triple Threat.” In an unconscionable act of Surlyness, he left me in the dark about these gyspy dealings, and Bob only realized he was committed to another 25,000 kilometers as his confused stare was led away from my moist eyes, pulled like a puppy from a bitch’s tit. Yeah, it was heart-wrenching.

Ending bike tour in Buenos Aires, Argentina

Bob and Surly are gone, once again carrying starry-eyed travelers across mystery-filled lands. Though I’ll forever remember our southerly ride, there is no point in looking back. My eyes are dry, full of stars, and there is still plenty of mystery left to unravel.

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[vimeo http://www.vimeo.com/26185290 w=450&h=400]

Listen to Camping Bus Radio here.
Bob, Surly, and I are listening now.

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Sandra and I in Cusco, Peru

Peruvian Sandra hosted me in her home when I biked through the belly button of the Incan universe, Cusco. Now she lives in Buenos Aires. Click the below photo to see her collection of the city’s many colorful murals.

Click to see Sandra's graffiti gallery

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Bolivian kids and I far from so-called civilization

FOREWORD: (Buenos Aires, Argentina) Many things I wouldn’t change, of course. Traveling without a return ticket, not buying bottled water, having an international ATM card to avoid fees, and using a trailer instead of panniers were all correct decisions. Zero regrets. But there are other major and minor aspects of my bike tour that I’d change if I were to do it all over again—or better said: when I do it again on a different continent:) Below I share twenty pangs of conscience so that aspiring cyclists can learn from my mistakes.

Kids in Puente Canoa, Colombia

HAPPINESS

1. Spend more time with kids

To play with a children, to see the world through their eyes, to hear their innocence in words, and show them by your big, awkward, blond presence that the world is wider than the route between their school and their home, is happiness, pure and simple. Though I spent a great many evenings in plazas and around my camp stove with little adults, a part of me wishes I’d have shunned the so-called wiser and wrinklier adult race in order to exclusively spend time with the munchkin sages that swarmed my tent each night.

2. Swim more throughout the day

The South American tropics are, hmmm, tropical. And hot. And you sweat gallons briskly coasting across flat land. Luckily, there is a miraculous, moving, living thing called the Amazon basin that covers most of the continent. In Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru I took advantage of this everywhere water to cool off during the day and relax (and even bathe before bed). Rivers, streams, and local swimming holes are all free options. In the other countries, however, I mostly pedaled past the riots of kids laughing and jumping off bridges into pristine waters. Future bike tourists hear me now: there is no rush, the journey is the destination. Swim every chance you get.

3. Track and buy local music/movies

I love music and movies, especially the Latin American variety. I wish I’d have asked more people to recommend their favorite artists, directors, must-hears, must-sees, etc. Bike touring offers the unique opportunity to discover music and movies that you’d never in ten lifetimes discover otherwise. Some of the best regional musicians, for example, only sell physical CDs which are not and probably never will be incorporated into the supposed all-inclusive, know-all internet. Make it a habit to ask people who they listen to and what they watch. Write it down. Don’t be afraid to buy that Tsáchila mix tape or that hypnotic Huayño waltz. You can always ship them home to cut weight.

4. Practice an instrument

Since finding my grandfather’s harmonica in the closet I’ve wanted to learn to play. That was many moons ago. On this trip I pedaled over 6,000 miles with a sexy Lee Oska into which I occasionally blew chaotic air but never a real song. I don’t sell it or give it away because it’s my Sisyphus boulder that reminds me of the absurdity of carrying it but not playing it, of the folly in thinking that going through the motions is enough. With a little practice each day, before bed or during rest breaks, I’d now be able to crank out wicked blues. Shoulda, coulda.

5. Collect addresses to later send postcards

This karmic postcard advice is listed in the ‘Happiness’ section for good reason: you can revive the smile of those special people met along the way with a three-by-five photo, a paragraph, and a stamp. The science behind this phenomena is fuzzy but this much I know: this smile, like the postcard, jumps borders and is teleported back with two-fold intensity, leaving sender and receiver grinning internationally. Please send the love more than I have.

Salad with ceviche in Arequipa, Peru

HEALTH

6. Eat more vegetables, especially green salads

My main fuel was rice and pasta, seasoned with onions and bullion cubes. Inexpensive, yes. Filling, yes. Healthy, no. Green vegetables, besides being cheaper than cheap in all South American countries, offer a surprising energy boost for their low-calorie count, not to mention much needed vitamins, minerals, and natural fibers. It wasn’t until Uruguay that I discovered green salads with oil and balsamic dressing (plus nuts, seeds, or a can of tuna) are perfect no-cook, quick-and-easy meals for bike touring.

7. Stretch during every rest break

This is self-explanatory but worth repeating: stretch during every rest break. Are we clear? Your body will thank you, maybe even love you. I didn’t respect this mantra, and my body hates me to this day.

Children in Pueblonuevo, Colombia

MONEY

8. Sleep free from day one

Sleeping without paying for lodging is the best way to save money on a bike tour. In Colombia, thanks to misguided media and my own amateurism, I pedaled half the country before exploring people’s natural tendency toward kindess. My recommendation: don’t wait. Learn some basic techniques, trust your intuition, and never pay to sleep. The real world happens outside hotel rooms.

9. Drink less alcohol—or give it up altogether

Forgive me, I may have white lied. Depending on how much you like to “party,” alcohol, not lodging, may be your trip’s greatest expense. I’ve met travelers who pump thousands of dollars each month (!) into the local bar scene, and I too admit to having indulged cachaça-style in the name of “going local.” But this post is not about my past, it’s about your future. My liver and I have grown older, wiser, and we feel less inclined to drink when going out. If you need to be drunk to enjoy the company of those around you, maybe they’re not that enjoyable to begin with, regardless of their nationality or native language. If your budget is limited, if you want sunrises not hangovers, skip the pisco sour and nurse a Coke—nobody will know the difference.

Friend Martha with her Kindle in Montevideo, Uruguay

TECHNOLOGY

10. Travel with a Kindle from day one

Books—and the free time to read them—are one of the many joys of travel. Here’s the problem: they’re heavy and specific ones are difficult to find. Here’s the solution: the Kindle 3G. Carry 3,000 books in your handlebar bag. Download free ebooks instantly. Buy from Amazon.com with the push of a button. Upload Wikipedia articles as travel guides. I began my affair with the Kindle in Brazil, but would have read more books, more often if I’d have loved her from the beginning.

11. Buy non-specialty gear locally

Before my U.S. departure I bought a US$40 knife, two synthetic shirts for US$90, and a US$3 spork. A splucking spork! All the above items in Colombia, where I began my bike tour, cost approximately US$30. Don’t be as gullible as I was. A shirt is a shirt is a shirt. Buy clothes, food, and other non-speciality items locally if the world region to which you travel has a lower cost of living. However, remember that certain items—bike gear, camp gear, electronics—may be cheaper and easier to find in your home country.

12. Open a SugarSync account before departure

A growing number of nomadic professionals live and work from the “cloud,” a catchy marketing term given to information stored online. No USB keys. No external hard drives. No worrying about losing mp3 music, travel photos, or all those poems no one reads if your laptop crashes or is stolen. Currently I’m not worry-free and floating blissfully in the “cloud.” If my laptop implodes, so does my mental stability. But I’m transitioning. After researching various cloud providers, I believe SugarSync to be the best overall option. We’ll both get an additional 500MB if you open a free account or 10GB if you begin a paid plan using this link.

Girl teaching me photography near Aguas Calientes, Peru

13. Learn photography before departure

In Colombia I had envisioned taking a photography course with a sexy Latina professor/painter/cyclist who would accompany me on slow strolls through parks, pointing with gentle gestures to the minute details on flowers, her breath fogging my SLR screen as her hands directed my lense into focus, the way the guy teaches the girl billiards from behind in bad 80s movies. This never happened. Instead I lugged my heavy semi-professional over the Andes, snapping photos in automatic, neither fully realizing the machine’s, South America’s, or my own artistic potential during our long jaunt south. Of course, a class is not needed to learn photography. Neither is a sexy Latina. Just play with a camera until it produces pretty pictures—preferably before you leave.

14. Label your digital photos

Write the names of people and places when uploading to SugarSync, Facebook, Flickr, Picassa, or whatever site you choose to store your parallel 2D universe doppelgängers. Label them now—you won’t remember later.

15. Set an audiobook listening schedule

The mind can do various tricks while in the saddle. It can think, long and silently from its hollow room. It can speak, mostly gibberish, but sense can be filtered from the noise if you squint really, really hard. Sometimes it erases itself. Then you’re forced to fall from the clouds to pull it from the bottom of the lake. It can do all these things and more, but sometimes you want it to be productive, you know? On these days I like to educate the mind using audiobooks (my Kindle is hard to read while riding the white line). Audible.com offers one monthly downloadable audiobook for US$7.49/month for the first three months, then US$14.95/thereafter. Bonus: if you cancel after the three-month promo period, they’ll try to convince you to stay by offering a free book credit. If you accept, download a book, then cancel again they’ll offer you US$20 in credit. That’s six audiobooks for US$22.44! Knowledge on clearance. Why did I wait this long to educate my poor, undistracted mind?

16. Use a bike computer/GPS combo to track your route

Not because orientating yourself is impossibly difficult in South America (regular road maps work fine), and not because I recommend traveling with unnecessary and expensive gear (I don’t), but because I’ve become so frustrated trying to manually input my route into Googlemaps that I gave up all together. This lack of a documented route only thickens the foggy aura around my bike tour as the days turn into weeks, months into years, and so on. Now I wish I knew exactly where I had ridden old Surly, and feel a bike computer/GPS combo has not only practical but nostalgic value.

Boys in Chinquinquira, Colombia

BLOGGING

17. Learn about blogging before departure

My “About” section was written seven weeks into my travels, in the colonial town of Barichara. It wasn’t until Ecuador that I learned to properly upload photos onto WordPress. What has ended up as the main vein to my former world started as an after-thought, a bike blog because bikers have blogs. I didn’t understand the importance of descriptive headlines, nor did I recognize that millions blog garbage and the only way to shine through is to publish posts I’d enjoy reading. Blogging just to blog was a huge mistake. If I’d have blogged with purpose from the beginning—defining my writing expectations, dedicating myself to a style—then perhaps a book could have been pulled from these electronic pages, or at least a travel memoir of minor renown that could circulate amongst cyclists.

18. Post religiously at least once a week

If you ignore a friend long enough, they’ll return the favor by falling off the earth. Blog readers are no different. If my initial blog incompetence (see above) didn’t kill blooming relationships with potential readers, then my long internet-less vacations, in which I’d disappear and reappear like a magician without the wand-waving foreplay and after-trick gratitude, were the swords through my readers’ casket. In fact, if you’ve been riding our handlebars from Trinidad to Argentina, loyally sweating through South America with us, then we owe you a donation for your perseverance, not the other way around. Treat your fans right, give them a bone at least once a week. Make this rule your religion. Bonus: your writing will improve and, like a novel, a storyline will begin to emerge from your chronological posts.

A motley crew outside Quito, Ecuador

19. Write daily in a private diary

Fits of Alzheimer’s. Amnesic tendencies. Inexplicable concussions. Pre-mature memory loss. My bike tour is all beat-up and forgetful. The name of that Brazilian fireman who proudly gave me a station hat? That mountain on which a Colombian trucker gifted me a block of panela? Those kittens’ names in Santa Cruz? That shaman’s secret recipe in the Ecuadorian Amazon? The list of forgotten fades to perspective points. It pains me that so many details, so many names and places, so many rich and layered memories are smoke in the wind. I wish I’d have kept a diary (paper for easy access) in which I’d have noted daily happenings, just a paragraph or two for posterity.

20. Sell an ebook through the blog

You’re special. Not in a unique snowflake kind of way, but as two eyes that float at an unprecedented world view. Cash that cow! If you have special knowledge—say, how to bike tour on a budget, how to save money for extended world travel, or even just a list of campstove recipes—write an ebook and offer it to your blog readers. It doesn’t matter if it’s been done before—it’s never been done by you. If it offers value to a niche with a need, it will sell. The ebook may not fund your retirement, but every dollar helps when pedaling unemployed into the unknown.

Camping atop abandoned house in Bolivia

21. Photograph sleeping location each night

Half-way though my bike tour I thought it would have been interesting to have photographed every place I slept, from the earthen floors of straw huts to Couchsurfers penthouse apartments to Altiplano campsites under the stars, then create a separate blog tab where all my sleeping spots would be on display, like an art gallery in honor of dream. Steal my idea—and send me a link later.

22. Photograph license plates in every country/state/county/city

While I’m at it, let me give away another good idea: photograph the license plates in each country/state/county/city—depending on how much you love random metallic numbers and letters—, then create yet another blog tab in honor of rust and automotive bureaucracy. Or create a photo collage and frame it on your wall when you’re old and grey and dreamy and all this crazy bike tour business has ended.

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[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=41_xdimGA6I&w=560&h=349]

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Left to right: Paola & Rambo (super dog), Igel & Caramba (super dog in training)

My German friends Igel and Paola—owners of the Casa de Ciclista in Colombia—recently embarked on yet another epic bike adventure. After pedaling 30 European and American countries—many with their super mutt Rambo—they’ll now explore Eastern Europe and Asia, this time with go-kart-looking trikes and Rambo’s energetic daughter, Caramba.

Click photo for more trike photos

Unfortunately for MB&S’s English-reading audience, Igel and Paola’s bike blog is German-language only (add Googletranslator to your browser here). If you’re planning a Eastern European or Asian bike tour it’s worth sifting through the awkward machine translation for golden tips within—or simply contact them in English, Spanish, or German. Igel and Paola are true travelers, cycle enthusiasts wise from the road, and they’ll be happy to hear from you.

Check out their blog here.

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Sushi night with friends and roommates

FOREWORD: (Buenos Aires, Argentina) I find interesting roommates wherever I choose to live, here and here for example. Buenos Aires—my home for the past two months—has followed the same fortunate sequence: sift through for-rent announcements, use intuition to find excellent people, move in, become friends. Especially in non-English-speaking countries, I prefer living with local roommates to learn languages and gain first-hand information about their country, which many times is different from the official story repeated by news networks. Given the Greek economic crisis which has been widely compared to Argentina’s in 2001, I was curious to hear what my current Argentine roommates experienced as teenagers during that turbulent time. Below, with my English translation, are their experiences in their own words.

NAME: Lucas Villamil
PROFESSION: Journalist
AGE: 27

“2001, as the world knows, was the year in which an economic crisis bankrupted Argentina, the country in which I grew up and still live. That December 21st I was in a friend’s house in La Horqueta, an exclusive neighborhood in northern Buenos Aires. My group of friends and I had just finished our last year of high school and were planning a January trip to Brazil together. It was a sunny day, we had played soccer and eaten an asado [Argentina BBQ], and the Argentine peso was still fixed one-to-one to the dollar.”

“I remember the news arrived first via alarmed mothers, then later by television. In many suburban zones people were blocking the streets and looting the supermarkets to stockpile the food they could no longer buy and, in some cases, to steal the things they could never afford in the first place. The TV, as usual, rejoiced in the violence. Some of those supermarkets full of desperate people were just a few blocks from were we’d spend lazy summer days in the local pool. Surprised, we watched as a needle popped our private school and basic needs bubble.”

“Little by little the hypothesis, the blame, the names, then later, the pots and pans in the street, began to sound. I was in my house and heard the metallic sound of social unease for a very long time. The middle class, scared by the violence that hunger and inequality are capable of generating, went to the streets to express their discontent like never before. Afterwards, all the rest happened.”

“I can’t claim to have been immediately aware of those events. A few days later, for the first time in my life, I saw the Racing Club, my club, become champions in the Argentine soccer league, and in January I was naked in Brazil, despite all that had happened. Upon returning to my country, one Argentine peso was no longer one dollar, and the pots and pans continued to sound. Now I understand something has changed, but not everything.”

NAME: Tomás Bullrich
PROFESSION: Environmentalist
AGE: 28

“I remember various things that affected me, the famous asphalt pirates that stopped truckers to steal their merchandise. I remember one cattle transport truck was traveling just outside Buenos Aires when a group blocked the road, intercepted the truck, stole its cattle, and later butchered them for food.”

“Businesses and supermarkets were looted, initially for extreme basic food needs, then later the thefts were distorted and done criminally to include appliances and electronics. Local shop owners lost everything during this looting. I remember the case of one Chinese businessman that committed suicide because they had looted his supermarket and he couldn’t afford to restock the shelves.”

“Comedic television programs that normally recorded live decided to not go on air out of respect for the country’s difficult period. The people’s outcry manifested itself non-stop as self-organized pot-and-pan protests and a slogan shouted in unison “QUE SE VAYAN TODOS! [Everyone Out!],” referring to our political representatives that demonstrated apathy and little support. There was police suppressing the protests, shouting, chaos, and the certainty that everything must change.”

“Huge multinationals fired en masse their employees and the national government responded with a plan to double unemployment assistance (two monthly salaries per year employed instead of one).”

“In short, these unerasable images and memories help to remind us of the historic turning point in our beloved land that was devastated by a system that should change but doesn’t seem to have taken into account that which has already happened.”

NAME: Tomás “Rolo” Fox
PROFESSION: Actor
AGE: 28

“My 2001 crisis memories are inerasable. I remember seeing the many images that were later aired on television. I’ll never forget my brother on the balcony pounding away on drum, nor my uncles carrying my cousins the square in front of the congress building to demand that the politicians leave office, others too leaving their routines to protest in the street. People were fed up and had said ‘enough.’”

“But more than those images, what I most remember is the sensation I felt during those days. A sensation that I’ve never felt before and haven’t felt since. It’s difficult to describe in words, but if I had to choose one word to explain it I’d say: apocalypse.”

“To see those anarchistic images in the streets, hungry people begging for food, customers banging on bank doors because their life savings were stolen, the president escaping from La Casa Rosada [the presidential office] in a helicopter, pots and pans sounding in front of Congress (and in every neighborhood) while “Que se vayan todos!” [Everyone out!] was chanted loudly, looting rumors not only in supermarkets but in private homes as well.”

“The state’s declaration of martial law and other apocalyptic-type rumors made me believe the country’s end was near, that everything had collapsed and that nobody knew what tomorrow would bring. Not to mention the future. It was an extreme situation on a massive scale. A terrifying sensation, as if on the border of an abyss.”

“Finally it passed (like everything in life) and little by little a sort of normalcy returned, although it was difficult. We’re still here, in the same place, in the same country, but nothing has been the same since those days.”

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Photo by: The Lighting Syndicate

FOREWORD: (Buenos Aires, Argentina) Fuerza Bruta, according to their badly translated website, is “…a phenomenon natural and inevitable. The result of millions of years…[it] doesn’t have a purpose. It is.” If it wasn’t for a recent conversation in which a friend and I marveled at the sequence of events that allowed our words to fly from our mouths into each other’s minds I’d have pegged this theater description as artsy fartsy filler, like excessive adjectives wrapped around a humble merlot.

Luckily, the conversation prepared me for an Argentine theater group’s evolution-of-fun (non)concept: as long as crazy, technical, purposeless entertainment is possible humans will bend it to breaking point, delimit the limitation and press on, not because the human race’s survival depends upon the advancement of perfectly syncopated strobe lights or because in the art world retreat is defeat, but simply because backward is boring.

The Fuerza Bruta show is everything but boring: it confuses the mind in the most innovative ways. Depending on how much purpose you try to pull from the purposelessness, questions begin to pile upon the bass line: what does it mean?; what does it mean?!; what does it mean!?! Below each of the following videos I filmed during last week’s show I’ve attempted to transcribe my exact mind confusions at that exact moment they took place—my brain in real-time! Trippy, yeah?

Check out the Fuerza Bruta official site here.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gMw6Mej64dc&w=425&h=349]

…We run without movement, without purpose, we sweat until it seems we’ve accomplished something. This goes on for years, from childhood until that golden age of adult when all that running and so little attaining begins to click, click, click, then pause—a long pause, like a failed mechanism—and some subtley walk away, slowly this time, unharmed; for others, it hits like a hammer coming down, a bullet, and they continue, sweating purposelessly, their entire lives. Funny, so many differences wrapped in similar skins, clothes, equally measured strides. When a real triumph—the trust of someone special, the warmth of two bodies—crashes accidentally into our stillness, our horizon-bound gaze can’t pause to see that the non-movement, the silence, the stillness is actually a built-in mechanism to hold us in one place long enough to love. We ignore this because it doesn’t click like a machine….

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jEwHHn7xgS0&w=425&h=349]

…I’ve walked the world in three languages and picked a handful of dialects from the gutters, yet I know nothing: the world would still be flat if fate had thrown me to a past century. The world may be a computer program, a space station, when I’m born two thousand years from now. Anything is possible—we float on a rock that floats on nothingness. Ah, the perfume is thick here. Why circle back to the beginning?…Women know nothing of men; men know nothing of women. They float on the flat side of each other’s tiny worlds, upside down and opposite each other’s tiny moves; our feet trace each other’s gravity but each half of our wholeness steps its weight, its lifetime of momentum into the skin, a little too hard, a little too soft, mostly forcing disasters….

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MmkLmuIYNOY&w=425&h=349]

Walk across the Atlantic or tunnel through the Amazon? Fish feet or ant hands, boat flight or submarine drive?…What is this!?…Can fish see the sky too? Do they think clouds are cotton candy? (No, they know nothing of cotton candy). Are satellites always the bug-that-got-away? Flies die the worst deaths, swallowed, sucked dry. Spider, you’re not evil but why don’t I believe you?…Vortex!? Time doesn’t exist! I was once the size of a dime in a place like this. Then I expanded, screaming at the world. Skin is not sound proof…Shine the light on loneliness. Shadows are alter egos. Is this what it’s like to be famous, a thin layer between the masses, faceless hands reaching skyward, perfect faces treading them like water? I want to be famous, I want to look down from above, swing from the rafters, slide across the waves, fly without checking the bank account, be touched, then read a book before bedtime with the lamplight on.

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Right now, a silent war is taking place….
Two countries are engaged in an epic battle….
Two ideologies push against one another for dominance….
Two languages clash with ferocious sounds….

Who are these titans and what do they want?

I’ll tell you….

But first, a video of a cute spotted kitten.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZCbdf_4TTMI&w=560&h=349]

This war of all wars began with an e-mail from my friend Colleen, a veterinarian at the Cincinnati Zoo who helped bring this ocelot into the world through artificial insemination:

My boss is attempting to name our most recent creation. The zoo keeps referring to her as a miracle kitten, which is what they named the first one we produced for them, but my boss finds it offensive (I think its hilarious and threaten to call him Saint William if he performs a 3rd miracle)…Anyway, thoughts on how to say ‘nasty little package’ or something to that effect in Portuguese? She is spunky to say the least…Hope you can offer some naming expertise!

Like Einstein picking up the phone when The Manhattan Project called, I responded casually, naively, unaware of my words’ far-reaching consequences:

Chispa (pronounced sh-is-pa): spark, flash, and apparently ‘genius’ according to an online dictionary but I’ve never heard it used in Portuguese that way. To sweeten the pie, 1) it’s used as a word to shoo cats when they’re naughty and 2) it sounds like a Brazilian Simba, and Disney already did the marketing for you. It’s the perfect name, in my humble Portuguese third-language opinion.

I soon learned that all was not tecnocolor Disney. Chispa had another meaning I failed to predict in that first fateful message. Where there are sparks, there are fires, and this tiny spark is now ablaze with violent competition.

Whhhhhhaaaaatttttt?!? Whyyyyyy?!?!? Whhhoooo?!?

I’ll tell you….

But first, look into the eyes of this rare baby Brazilian ocelot.

This is Chispa...well, not yet....

It’s the Turks. And the Brazilians. They’re fighting. Right now. War. Guns. Name calling. Bad stuff. Real bad. They want this little baby ocelot…dead…no, no, no, wait…sorry…they want…this little baby ocelot…named in their respective native language.

The Brazilians want this ocelot to be named Chispa. This makes sense: she’s a Brazilian ocelot, and she should have a Brazilian Portuguese name.

The Turks want this ocelot to be named “Ayla,” which means moonlight in Turkish. Poetics aside, Chispa is Brazilian. The Turks have no business here.

Until July 1st, 2011 the Bridgeport Beardsley Zoo is conducting an online vote to officially name this baby ocelot. My recommendation, Chispa, is on the ballot. And so is Ayla, the name with the most votes thus far.

MAKE ME A PROUD FATHER!
MAKE CHISPA OFFICIALLY CHISPA!
END THIS SENSELESS TURKISH INVASION!
VOTE FOR CHISPA AT THE FOLLOWING LINK!

http://tinyurl.com/VOTE4CHISPA

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