Tuesday, September 29, 2009

So dutch right now...

This song always gets me. It makes me want to sing.

So overplayed. So feel good.

So hard to understand.

The story of the video is that the good looking Anglo Dutch guy is Jan Smit, an old child star - Holland's male, buff, good looking version Nikki Webster - and he's doing a "collaboration" with Damaru, who is a fairly recent Surinamese Dutch singer/songwriter. But Damaru originally released the song, and it went fairly well, and then Jan Smit got thrown into the mix (hijacked ?) and I guess it topped the charts as his "comeback".

Just in case you were interested. It's not a bunch of old dutch people photographing random people walking down the street. It was a big deal over here I think.


Hallelujah!!

A day off from the restaurant!

That place is crazy. I don't know how much longer I can stick it out there, but it's entertaining to say the least. Between the crazy staff, the tourists, and the buzz around Dam Square, it makes for some interesting times.

I'm sitting in my tracksuit pants, and sweatshirt in my living room, and I'm feeling very happy to be exactly where I am at the moment.

My washing is on, and I'm about to make a cup of peppermint and green tea. My flatmate is on a work trip in Belgium for 5 days, and I have the place to myself. The tv is on, and MTV/dutch television commercials are in the background, meanwhile I'm watching the rain fall into the river Ij from my living room. My apartment is on the 9th floor, and to the left I can see the River Ij, and to the right, I can see the train tracks and the Inner East side of Amsterdam. I'm loving this day off. It definitely makes me feel like I have settled into life here.

I haven't watched tv since the first night I got here, and I checked myself into an airport hotel because I was coming down with a cold. That was August the 7th.

I should be going to the supermarket, but it's wet outside, and I can't be bothered cycling in the rain. Well, I could walk, for 5 minutes, but....mehhhhh.

I had a totally nutso weekend. Sar, Luke and George left on Saturday, so Friday night was our last night together. Funnily enough, we ended up repeating the same thing we did the second night they were here; hitting the cheap backpacker bar beer garden, and then heading into a little bar district called Nieuwmarkt.

I managed to catch Bastiaan, a friend of my friend Lauren. Bas and Lauren studied in France together, and we have been meaning to catch up for the last 6 weeks, and have a drink.

On Saturday, I went out to a special breakfast. My friend Sam ( the crazy Anthopology student) organises community breakfasts in the outer suburbs of Amsterdam, to promote community dialogue and get people together in communities and meet each other. At about 9 am, I dragged my over partied ass to a suburb in the East about 20 minutes by train. Sam had organised croissants and pastries, coffee and tea, and beauticians, workshops and a jazz band outside a suburban shopping centre. People in the neighborhood passing by were invited to have a hand massage, and listen to an ipod that was filled with podcasts of peoples stories from other neighborhoods of similar socio-economic status. It was pretty cool and a totally eye opening experience. I was sitting outside a shopping centre where in that same week, a young boy had been shot, and people arrived with stories to tell.

Photo courtesy of www.debalie.nl

I met a pastor who was Aruban and Dutch, An elderly Chinese/Dutch/Indonesian lady, a Dutch woman with two gorgeous kids, and a Surinamese sailor. Then I came home, and watched catamarans sailing along the River Ij, from my living room, and then went for a bike ride around my neighborhood. I went to a boutique brewery near my house, which is built inside an old windmill, and there was a band playing the bonnet of a blue cadillac outside in the courtyard, called "Johnny Solo and the Gangsters of Love." When they finished their set, they jumped back into their cadillac and sped off down the street. Rock and Roll baby, Rock and Roll.

There's a really famous multicultural street near my house called Javastraat ( Java Street ) and they were having a food festival that night. I had to get ready to meet Laura so I couldn't stay for the festival, but I was so happy to discover the area, and taste some really good food. All these food stalls, there was a little afro-carribean community of guys with a stall, selling freshly squeezed orange juice out of a van and playing dub and reggae from a turntable in the van as well, lots of dutch food stalls, Fifteen Amsterdam restaurant, Indian, Indonesian, Surinamese, Morroccan, Turkish, Spanish... heaven!

It was my BFF Laura's birthday, and we met for a drink at Soundgarden, the bar Leon and Sam introduced us to. We love it. As I was running late, it was funny to walk in and find Laura sitting with Leon, and Sam again, by coincidence. Leon and Sam had to go home after a few drinks, they had work the next morning, but their friends invited us to a Silent Disco House Party, around the corner.

It actually makes a lot of sense because the houses are so crammed next to each other here, parties usually conclude with some really unhappy neighbours.

We arrived on our bikes, about 3 minutes from Soundgarden, and were given headphones, and told to cut loose on the open bar. Ooooh, so not a good idea.

It was funny, I was sitting outside the apartment ( trying to get my head together, I had a little bit too much to drink, but more on that later....) and all I could here was the stomping of feet against floor boards, but other than that, no noise whatsoever.The neighbours downstairs must have been so confused.

Yes, well as can probably predict, open bar and Rani sometimes get along too well, and the next thing you know, I had my first canalside vomiting experience.

I don't reccomend it. My friend Laura had to cycle me back to her house. On her Birthday. Did I mention it was her 21st?

Worst.Friend.Ever.

I am keen to get some more photos up here, but I just have to get my camera sorted. or my Computer. Both are out of memory.

On the other hand, here are some songs that are really inspiring me at the moment!

Noisettes: Never forget you











Sunday, September 27, 2009

Amsterdam Street Philosophers

Sometimes Hope Delays a Lot.

Love is not meant to be normal.

My biggest Dream was to sell out.

Just Do it like Nike does.

Tofu = Life

And a special link I just found!

And a video about Laser the Graffiti Poet. In Dutch but interesting none the less!!

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Living in a haze

My life has turned into one big blur.

8 hours shifts in the restaurant with no breaks.

Various job interviews.

Touring around behaving badly with friends.

Cycling through the city to get home.

Sleep.

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Reason #1,253,252 I love Amsterdam

I am sitting in Amsterdam's beautiful brand new central library checking some emails (free internet - got to love it) and there's a piano in the lobby that anyone can play as long as they are experienced. Half an hour time limit.

The music echoes throughout the building, and on a day when you get a jazz student from Uni of Amdam conservatorium (which is next door to the library) tinkling on the ivory, it is the best place to be in the world.

Please, don't insult me...

.... by asking me if I'm American....

I got asked for the 1 millionth time today if I was American.

Laura doesn't think I sound American. I don't think I sound American.

It's annoying.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

"This place could be of historical importance"

So, I have been really getting into reading graffiti on the back of toilet doors lately.

What can I say, I am always up for some education, especially when it is free.

Actually, Amsterdam has a funny little graffiti artist who runs by the name "Laser", and he/she sprays odd but poignant little sayings on surfaces like construction site caravan offices, portable toilets, fences etc. In my first week in Amsterdam, I remember one that said "Do you get people? I don't. - Laser (tag/date)"



Anyway, I digress.

In exploring a new city, Laura and I have taken it upon ourselves to be the pioneers of broke and unemployed Swiss/Australians youngsters living in Amsterdam, and made it our duty to seek cheap drinks and entertainment.

Which means, when we meet, we need to seek the most thrifty way to entertain ourselves. So far we have found a few bars that are cheap.We have come across some nice bars and some not so nice bars, and some interesting ones to say the least. Which makes for interesting toilet door graffiti observation. Generally the dirtier the bar, the more enlightened I get from sitting on the toilet.

Backpacker bar toilets doors are usually full of drunk scribings from Canadians, Kiwis, and Australians, that don't have much to say except "Caz was here, Contiki July 2009, rocks yeah, love my girls xxx".

The bar that Leon and Sam took Laura and I too last week had great graffiti on it's toilets doors and walls. So many angsty girls must hang out at that bar - all the graffiti was quite deep and perhaps, a little bit overdramatic. (Actually, I need to bring this up right now - Even though the graffiti was thought worthy, it wasn't an Emo in sight at this grungy bar we were at - in fact I should point out that EMOs DONT EXIST IN AMSTERDAM! Well, no locals are Emo's. The only Emo's I have seen are working in a backpacker bar in the red light district and they are Australian.... hmf. Boo.)

Anyway, one of the things written on the back of the toilet door was "This place could be of historical importance." I kind of liked that someone had thought about that, because to me, it was. It was historically important to me, because the actual graffiti itself was reminding me about exactly where I was standing, the city I can now call myself a resident in, and the people I was hanging out with, and I felt very very lucky.

I felt the same way when I started my new job yesterday.

I am working in a bar/restaurant in the middle of Dam Square. I looked out at the most touristy part of Amsterdam, wearing a waiter's uniform, and serving tourists beer and burgers, and I realised that I now live here, and that sort of sent my head spinning.

Here's a crazy fact, ONE GUY OWNS DAM SQUARE - he owns every single restaurant/bar that looks over Dam Square's war monument, which is a pretty big deal, since there are about 5 of them, and they are crowded nearly every single day.

He is a Chinese Dutch guy who never even finished highschool. Wow, Richard Branson eat your heart out. If that isn't inspiring I don't know what is.

Anyway, back to my day, the people that work there are all international, and I actually don't mind working there. Well, it has only been one day, but everybody seems to know what their role is. Like mine, at the moment, is a food runner. Which means I don't take orders, and I don't carry money, I literally just serve the food to people and clear tables. I think in America they are called Bus boys. Yes, I am a bus boy. But it's great. Zero responsibility. Don't have to talk to any customers should I not feel the need, which is good.

I met so many different people and personalities yesterday; My manager on duty was a great Javanese Indonesian guy who has lived in Holland for 30 years, and he's fantastic! He's such a great guy, really cool and funny. I also met a gay Thai bartender, a cute little Filipino chick, a few crazy Polish girls with, a couple of smooth dutch guys, all of us made a pretty crazy front of house team. All of them had moved to Amsterdam, and spoke a little bit of Dutch, but we all spoke english and it was sort of fun.

Not sure how I will feel about the job in about a week, maybe it's just the honeymoon phase.

My friend Laura had a trial shift at American Apparel yesterday, so we met up for some dinner to discuss our days, and we went to a backpacker bar nearby Dam Square called "Belushi's" - the place where the bar staff are Australian and Emo. But the beer is cheap.

We were sitting outside, and then we got kicked out of the beer garden, and moved inside. When I was finishing my beer, Laura looked at me and she said " What the fuck is this game they are playing on tv at the moment? It looks so stupid."

I looked up at the plasma and it was England vs Australia cricket match. I nearly choked on my beer from laughter.

She and I were so meant to be best friends.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Oh Mr Swayze...

Woke up this morning to read the sad news on facebook.... **SNIFF**

Monday, September 14, 2009

The week that has been ....

I realise I haven't written anything of remote interest recently.

As I review my last few posts, I discover, I have written about laundry, travel statistics, and some other random depressive shit, than.... nothing, for days on end.

I tend to do that when I end up living my life instead of blogging about the life I wish I was living. Then once an event filled week (or month) has ended, I can't ever really remember what I have been doing.

So as I listen to some old school Kylie Minogue, perhaps I shall take some time to reflect on what I did this week.

So, last time I really wrote, it was a Wednesday, and I was checking out of my hostel.

Well, my studio that I am living in at the moment has been B.L.I.S.S - So quiet, so private, my own space. And this neighborhood is great. I really love this part of town.

For reference sake; here's a rundown on what I have learnt about Amsterdam geography.

North: considered to be traditionally old working class, poor, and a grungy, but as per any of the following suburbs around the world, it's being redeveloped and rebranded as "cool". MTV have just set up offices here. The north is technically anything above Centraal Station. The ocean ( i think) separates mainland Amsterdam from the Northern areas. Hence locals that live in the north need to catch (free) ferries from Centraal Station to one of 3 or 4 islands that they live on.

There is also another part of the north that is above Centraal Station (just), that is still part of mainland Amsterdam, and has been totally redeveloped ( about 2-3 years ago) with warehouse style apartments. This area is close to Philips HQ in Amsterdam, and the Amsterdam Passenger Terminal for cruise ships etc, and is called Zeeburg (pronounced 'Zay-burgch'). I will be moving into an apartment there in about 3 days!!

Yes! I found a room, and I didn't say anything initially because I was sort of suspicious about whether it would all work out etc, but IT HAS!!!

I will be living with a 32 year old American lady from Boston, who does something to do with business or something. She is awesome, her name is Amber and she calls me "dude". The apartment is brand new and totally luxe!! My new living room overlooks the River Ij and my bedroom is about 17 or 18 metres squared, which is AMAZING, because the rooms here are tiny, and you pay through the nose for them (like 8 metres squared for 500 EU a month... I had a closet once that was about 4 m2...... can't wait to post pictures up soon!

Ok, back to the geography and culture lesson of Amsterdam.

East:I haven't really explored this area yet, but I have been in the inner city fringes of it. East CBD (Centrum) of Amsterdam is home to the Red Light District, where I lived for about 3 weeks. While I wouldn't recommend staying in this area for prolonged periods of time, contrary to popular belief, it's pretty safe ( like most of Amsterdam.) Sleazy but safe.
My general feeling is that the inner city East is quite expensive and a bit toffee, especially around the Artis Park (Zoo). Once you get past this area though, it starts to get very multicultural, and a lot poorer, with a lot more ethnic diversity, with local and immigrant Surinamese, Morrocan, Turkish, and Carribean communities.

South: Old, rich and posh. The area called the Old South have treelined and wide streets, and the sidewalks are lined with beautiful delicatessens filled with gourmet breads, cakes, pastries, fish, and produce, and boutiques brimming with well tailored garments and the well off ladies that like them, and cafes with sprinklings of hip youngsters with lots of time on their hands, and even more money.

Also home to a groovy little area with funky cafes and restaurants called De Pijp (Literally, 'The Pipe'), Vondelpark (Amsterdam's biggest recreational park, always full on a sunny day, or a day where the sun isn't that apparent, but the wind isn't either) Museum area of Amsterdam, and other entertainment areas in the Centrum.

West: Home to the funk and soul AND the young and loaded.
You can meet real old school Amsterdammers in Brown cafes, and also the young and uber wealthy in trendy pubs. The suburb of Jordaan ('Yor-daan') is arty, trendy, vintage and full of gorgeous canals, canal bridges and little streets. Everybody wants to live in Jordaan, but very few people get the opportunity. The Old West where I am staying now isn't as pretty as Jordaan, but it's still pretty damn cool. It's the quintessential Amsterdam suburb, where people live in tall and skinny buildings that are about 3 stories high, and with shopfronts on the ground floor. A few coffeeshops here, an asian grocer there, a Coffee Company around the corner (think Hudson's coffee or Cafe Nero), a turkish bakery over the road, a laundrymat to the left, a boutique or three just around the bend, and an African restaurant or five dotted around the place.

Anyway, I was supposed to be talking about the week that was.

Ok, so Wednesday, I went pounding the pavement, looking for a job. I dropped off about 10 resumes, not really thinking much about it.

The thing that sucks is that there are signs all over the place looking for fulltime help, or part time help, in cool trendy boutiques, bakeries, and restaurants... EVERYWHERE!!! But everybody asks, "Do you speak Dutch? Unfortunately if you don't, we can't hire you."

Sometimes I just put on a sweet smile, and lie and say in dutch "I can speak a little bit." (It's true - I can count from one to ten. And say thank you. And goodbye. That is classically defined as "a little bit.")

This has gotten me 2 interviews so far.

At around about this time last week, I remember clutching my resumes in a plastic cover in my hand, and gripping them in frustration, recalling a conversation I had with the Ducth Embassy in Canberra...

Me: ... Thanks for all your help with the visa application form. Just a quick question... will it be a problem that I don't speak Dutch, when I look for a job?

Lady: Not, not at all, especially if you just want a job in a shop or a restaurant. Everybody speaks english there.

Anyway, on Thursday, I met my friend Laura for a Big Day Out ( on a limited budget.) We decided to cheer ourselves up because we had no jobs, and nothing to do...

So usually we meet in Dam Square, in the middle of the city centre, but I suggested meeting in Leidseplein ( a tourist square in the inner south ) for a change of Chi. We proceeded to H&M, where we bought thrifty warm items like scarves (Laura) and cheap hosery (2 EU for a pair of tights! Bargain.)

Then we went to the Albert Cuyp markets in the Area of De Pijp, which is sort of a bit boho, and daggy with counterfeit clothes, and used mobile phone stalls, witha few cute stalls here and there. I bought a new pillow, because my neck was crying out for a fluffy little supportive friend.

I got depressed while we were shopping, and Laura had this great idea of buying a bottle of wine, and a bread stick and some olives from the supermarket and going to Vondelpark to sit in the sun (it was unusually sunny that day.)

So we did that, and then I sat on the back of her bike and we made our way to the park. Laura and I get up to heaps of crazy adventures, and they usually start with us meeting for a drink and then deciding to go somewhere else, and I sit on the back of her cool, flower covered mountain bike that she rode around Iceland in, and I sing her songs while she peddles me around Amsterdam.

Usually the songs go;

"Laura and Rani,
We're broke
and we have no money,
But it's always so funny....."

We found a sunny spot in the park, and had out little picnic. She wore her new scarf and I kicked back on my new pillow. About half an hour into our relaxing afternoon, we met these two guys, Leon and Sam, who were actually dutch. (Shock, horror - Dutch people are reknown for not really wanting to mix). Leon and Sam are buddies through their Anthropology course that were doing at the University of Amsterdam.

Then a junkie tried to sell me this bike he was riding on. And I bought it. Well, actually Laura bought it for me. For 20 Euros. And it was too tall for me. But I liked it.

Sam and Leon wanted to show us their favourite bar in Amsterdam, and they took us to this cool bar in the West called "Soundgarden"; a grungy little pub that had a terrace overlooking a canal. We met more of their Anthropology friends, who were nice - then they started drinking beer from someone's shoe, and that sort of freaked me out a little bit. But they were cool nonetheless.

As we were all parting ways, I fell off my bike, in the bike lane outside the pub as it was closing, and everyone was milling outside. Karma's a bitch.

The next day I had to meet and greet some visitors from Indonesia at the airport at 6am. Needless to say, I was not impressed after a big night observing local Anthropology students drink from each other's shoes. I ended up in Den Haag, another town about half an hour's drive away from Amsterdam. Don't ask.

On Saturday, I had a trial shift at a beauty store called "Sabon"; it's like the Dutch version of the Body Shop. It was supposed to go for 3 hours. I was sent home after 1. It was the weirdest trial shift ever. I hadn't even had an interview yet, and they invited me to come in.

They spent 15 minutes talking to me about body scrub, and then they wanted me to experience the products, so one of the girls gave me a facial for half an hour. Then they wanted me to approach customers. I approached 4 and did the things they told me to do, like talk about the products, and give them opportunities to play with this body scrub. And then the store manager told me to come back on Wednesday night for a group interview.

I went out and bought a lock for my bike in an effort to piece together my self esteem, and figure out what the fuck just happened. A trial shift and THEN a group interview?!?

That night, I met up with Sam and Leon, and my friend Sverre and his friend, Mustafa for a drink. Or four. To help forget that I was unemployed, and a Soap shop didn't want me to stay on at a trial shift for free labour that day. It worked, and I managed to forget. I also ate a chocolate muffin that night which heightened my spirits immensely.

On Sunday, I met my visiting aunty and took her and her friends out for the day. No comment.

Today, I met up with Laura again after I had a job interview at a restaurant. I got the job. I start tomorrow.

I can't figure out if I should be happy for the potential income, or if I'm crying on the inside because I hate hospitality and it feels like I am starting a prison sentence tomorrow.

We went out for lunch, and then she went out and bought a new mobile phone, because her's dies everytime you call her and talk to her for 2 minutes. I went to City Hall and collected my tax file number.

I got home and checked my email, and found out that a company I applied for a job with had written to me expressing interest in my application to be an English Content Editor for their website. It's like the European version of Wotif.com . They were just wary about my working visa status. I wrote to them and told them I could work for one year and could send them a copy of my visa. I am beyond ecstatic. If I get this job, I will ONE VERY HAPPY LITTLE LADY!

Keep your fingers crossed people - I don't want to serve coffees and english breakfasts to people for 40 hours a week for a year.

That was my week.

Poetry for life


“Only as high as I reach can I grow,


only as far as I seek can I go,


only as deep as I look can I see,


only as much as I dream can I be.”




~Unknown

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Did someone just try and steal my bag?

I almost got my bag snatched last night, about 500 metres away from where I am currently living. A couple of kids on scooters drive past slowly tried to take my bag from my shoulder and drive off.

Weirdly enough, the scooter driver lost their balance and the guy sitting behind him couldn't reach my bag strap, and he just pushed me over really hard.

Weird, cos at the time, I didn't even know what was happening, until the 2 people I was with informed me of what just happened. Thankfully, IT FAILED, or ELSE I WOULD HAVE BEEN SCREWED!

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

A few stats about my travels..

I have been away from Australia for 94 days

Of those 94 days I spent

1.5 days in Singapore
27.5 days in Indonesia
17 days in the UK
12 days in Finland
2.5 days in Denmark
1/2 a day in Sweden
10 days in Spain
AND
I have been in Netherlands for 23 days.

I have spent 25 nights in a hostel
2 nights in a hotel
10 nights in a Villa
27 nights in my parents house
2 nights with family friends
and 29 nights with friends

and tonight, house sitting!

Stepping out into the real world

I check out of the hostel today and move into a friend's apartment in the Old West area for around about a week.

It feels weird, even though I was dying to get out of living in a hostel, this actually means that I will be living IN AMSTERDAM, and technically, not a traveller based in a hostel anymore. (Even though I haven't travelled in a couple of weeks, being surrounded by travellers sort of made me feel like one.)

Living in this hostel has taught me so many things about people, and a little bit about myself. I have run into so many oddballs living here - staff AND guests, but also some really fantastic people.

I am having a coffee with one of the girls that works here tonight, after she finishes work. I wrote about her in one of my first posts when I arrived in Amsterdam. Her name is Hailey. It will be nice to extend my network of friends - I have been hanging out a lot with my Swiss friend Laura, and my Norwegian friend Sverre. Not that there's a problem with that (in fact, we'e had some pretty random and crazy times), but it's always nice to get to know new people.

I am also having a coffee with a guy called Bastiaan on Friday, who lived in France with a friend of mine, Lauren from Adelaide (for a year I think). New people, new opportunities, new perspectives, new friends!

Today is the 9th day of the 9th Month of the 2009th year (by the Christian/Roman Calender anyway..) I wonder what it means???

it might signify good news on the job hunting front!! JOB JOB JOB JOB JOB is my mantra for today!

Sunday, September 6, 2009

Cleanliness is next to Godliness...

but I don't have ANYTHING clean, since I dropped off my laundry on a Saturday (yesterday), and didn't try and pick it up until today. There are a few laundry places around here, I went to one yesterday that was about 3.50 EU a load, then 1 EU for 8 minutes of drying. I needed to do 2 loads of each, and sitting around in a cramped tiny laundramat for over an hour and a half didn't seem too appealing.

I went back to my usual place here, that does 5 Kg for 7.50 EU, and they wash and dry it for you, and you pick it up.

I thought things would be open here on Sundays - I mean, it's not like the Red Light district is an overly "holy" place, do the owners of the laundramat need the day off to pray?

Silly, Silly girl.
Wearing a dress, thongs, a pull over, a scarf and a beanie. Same outfit as yesterday... Might just stay in tonight.

Saturday, September 5, 2009

Hard Road

Laundry. Ugh.
Free Bike. Ding a ling.
Looking at another room. Please, please, please!!

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Reggae Heart

Tim and I wanted to go to a hip hop/reggae bar last night, and ended up getting our names on the Guestlist for The Wailers concert, thanks to my new friend, Sverre.

Random, but it rocked.