"All you need is love, but a little chocolate now and then doesn't hurt."

"All you need is love, but a little chocolate now and then doesn't hurt."
Showing posts with label Puerto Rico. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Puerto Rico. Show all posts

Saturday, November 8, 2014

Tourist for the Day in Puerto Rico


Which are the general steps to become a tourist in your homeland? First, you must wake up early. Second, you should prepare a backpack with snacks, towels, and additional clothes (in case you are thinking to go to the beach). Third, get up in the car and LET THE ADVENTURE BEGIN! (Don't forget to establish a budget!)

Keeping this steps in mind, I decided to go with my family to the southwest of the island. We wake up early today and we prepare the stuff we need for the trip (snacks such as Frito Lay's bags, beverages, and homemade sandwiches and backpacks with clothes, towels, shoes, etc.). We get up in our car and took the Road #2 until Road #100 to finally arrived to Cabo Rojo. We ate "pastelillos de queso, pastelillos de chapín and alcapurrias" at a kiosk near the roadside. They were delicious. We continued our trip until we arrived to Playa Sucia, but we can't get off the car because it was full and my mom didn't want to park the car too far from it. Nonetheless, we saw the Cabo Rojo's salt flats best known in Spanish as "las salinas".

Therefore, we decided to go to Boquerón beach and we had a great time together. The day was awesome, the weather was perfect, and we were really satisfied. After we set up our spot in the beach, we stayed a couple of hours in the water. The sun was at its peak, the water was good, and the sand was very hot. While I was in the water, I had the opportunity to analyze the environment which it was very calm and clean. The beach is a great natural scenery in which we can search for answers to our internal journey while we are having fun with our external journey. Keeping in mind that we had to pretend we were tourists, we felt a little bit out-grouped by the other Puerto Ricans at the beach, but we also felt in-grouped when we saw a couple of American tourists near us. I can't elaborate more on this topic because we didn't have the opportunity to talked with the locals nor the other tourists. My perspective toward the Puerto Ricans didn't changed at all because I had already seen that kind of exclusion or out-group by the locals to the tourists. Probably, the reason could be because of the English language.

Every adventure comes to an end... We decide to leave the beach around 5:00 p.m. We got up again in our car and finally went back to our home. I must say that being a tourist for a day is one of the best experiences I ever had in my life. We have to be thankful for all the wonderful places we have in our island. Sometimes we, as locals, do not appreciate all the marvelous places Puerto Rico offers to everyone and we need to be a tourist for a day to enjoy it.

Road #2
Near Cabo Rojo

Only a few minutes to Playa Sucia 

On our way to Playa Sucia

Part of the Cabo Rojo's salt flats

Having fun at Boquerón beach with my siblings

Boquerón beach
Time to say good bye... 

Sunday, October 19, 2014

The Rum Diary


The film The Rum Diary is based on a book written by Hunter S. Thompson. The movie was directed by Bruce Robinson and was filmed in Puerto Rico. American actor Johnny Depp  interpreted an American journalist called Paul Kemp who hasn't been successful in the United States and started working for the San Juan Star newspaper in our island during the 1960s. 

The Rum Diary is similar to the Jamaica Kincaid's novel A Small Place. Jamaica Kincaid attacked the tourists in a way the reader can assume the tourist's role and felt offended by her writing. Paul Kemp arrived to Puerto Rico without any knowledge about the island. Kincaid said about this: "A tourist is an ugly human being." And why not? At first, he didn't know anything about our culture, the Puerto Rican lifestyle or even the economic status. He was an outsider who was hired to write about horoscopes until he faced the reality of Puerto Rico and started caring about the problems in the island after relating with Sala. Kemp became more interested in the situations of the island: poverty, alcoholism, ignorance, etc. 

Kemp changed throughout the movie. His transition can be defined with two scenes. The first was at the beginning of the movie. The taxi driver asked him something in Spanish and he replied he don't speak Spanish. This is a clear example of his outsider (tourist) view. The second scene is the one at the bowling alley. Kemp asked a tourist: "What you like most of Puerto Rico?"  The tourist replied: “The bowling alley and the casinos." Kemp asked him: "Have you seen a lot of the island?".  The tourist's  wife replied: “We never leave the hotel. It is not safe”.  His last question was: “But you are having fun, right? The woman replied: “Oh yeah, lots of fun! “. Here is Kincaid's voice: "The tourist is an ugly human being." After that, he wanted to write about the issues of Puerto Rico and he can be seen as an insider or partially insider (traveler). 

At the end of the movie, Kemp went back to the United States and became a successful writer. It is also a transition from an unsuccessful to a successful journey. It was a change of his perspective toward Puerto Rico and its locals. Kemp was able to understand the issue's location of the Puerto Ricans and sympathize with them in a good way.



Wednesday, October 8, 2014

"Teaching" and "Helping" by Jim Cooper


It was assigned to read two chapters from the book Down on the Island by Jim Cooper. In the first one, "Teaching", Cooper expresses his point of view about the syllabus for the English class he was teaching at the Colegio located in Mayagüez. He noticed how much difficult was for the students to learn English because most of them didn't know it very well and therefore they didn't understand the readings they had to do at first. After he visited some public schools, he also noticed some of the teachers were having trouble to speak English. Cooper proposed a syllabus which included strictly language courses to the freshman and short stories and novels to the sophomore students. He would loved to stated that the language program he set up solved the student's language problems, but it didn't at all.

In the second chapter, "Helping", Cooper expresses his point of view about a method implemented by the students from our island. This method consisted of 'helping throughout cheating'. How this can be possible? Puerto Ricans, as Jim Cooper demonstrated, are the most hospitable people in the world and they tend to do whatever they can in order to help others. Many of the students seek for an extra help in their classmates, but this attitude was not only in their everyday work but during the time they were taking exams too. However, students learn how they must behave in the school since they are kids at the primary levels. All I want to say with this statement is that students have been taught since their primary levels to be cooperative with each other.

"When I started asking students why they were looking at another student's paper during an exam, they replied with no embarrassment: because I don't know the answer, and maybe he does. If I asked the other student why he let him look at his paper, I got some such answer as: but I'm just trying to help him. He's my friend."

We all know that this kind of help is actually cheating, but the students didn't realize it. It is also worrying that Cooper stated teachers also promote the cheating attitude. I think we must do everything possible to earn our grade by our own effort; not at the expense of others. Students should help them, but in a good way working on cooperative teaching or learning, but they should not cheat. I'm against it.



Wednesday, September 17, 2014

My Island, My Home...


What is home? Roberts (2008) described home as "variable and may be the place of birth, place of residence or may be defined by the popular notion 'where the hearts is'. But I think that home is more than just the place of birth, residence or 'where the heart is'. Home is something that we can identify with. It is not just a place, it is OUR place. 

Our island has its unique enchantment as one of the most beautiful places to go on vacations, but it is also more than this. In the research I have done, I found a lot of comments of tourists who came to our island and talked about some of the realities of Puerto Rico. Nevertheless, other tourists made pointless comments about our country. Outsiders have their own opinion; their own perspective. As a Puerto Rican and insider of my country, I have another perspective of what I called home. Some of my points match with the statements of the tourists; others not. As an example of the pointless comments, one tourist wrote: "No mountains near the beach. Not Hawaii, but cool for what it is." I think this tourist never went to beaches like Playa Escondida in Fajardo nor Flamenco Beach in Culebra. These beaches are surrounded by mountains and they are such really beautiful. However, Puerto Rico is more than its beaches and the Old San Juan. The center of Puerto Rico is full of history, fauna, flora, and many interesting places to visit not only as an outsider but as an insider too. Instead most of the tourists emphasizes at the perfect beaches, great food and weather, the one that caught my attention was the comment about our unique culture. "Culture...that complex whole which includes knowledge, belief, art, law, morals, custom, and any other capabilities and habits acquired by man as a member of society." (Tylor, 1871). We identify ourselves with our culture and the language is an important part of it. 

Our island is also recognized for its crime, violence and drug problems and a poor economy. It is also important to establish here we have a lot of poverty and many sceneries in which we can easily contrast between the ones who are economically well instead of those who are not.  However, these problems are not only from our country. There are many countries that are equal to or worse than us. Therefore, I recommend Puerto Rico as a place not only to visit, but also to live. Puerto Rico is our home. Puerto Rico is MY HOME!