Today’s accomplishments include:
- Burning toast and setting my building’s fire alarm off (great way to make friends)
- Getting lost by my lonesome in a city still unknown to me
- Making friends in a city playground still unknown to me (disregard the 15 year age difference)
- Discovering a city now sorta kinda unknown to me
Because I’m half irresponsible/half secretly afraid of
people, I… “forgot” to sign up for the orientation tramp (hike) most students
went on today and took a “me” day.
After my sincere apologies and attempt to explain my
inability to cook to the residential employee who was inspecting my apartment
post toast incident, I decided it was time to leave the laptop and do something
with my life. I mean hey, I’m in New
Zealand.
Now that I’m officially enrolled at the University of
Canterbury and own a student card, I’d thought I’d put it to use and go to the
gym.
I left five minutes later.
For one, I don’t exactly enjoy that whole workout thing, and
two, I felt an overwhelming restlessness while staring at that stupid red light
that moves around the digital track and running in place. I also had no idea if the treadmill was set
to miles or kilometers. So I decided
today wasn’t the day to start my annual new years resolution of being a healthy
active person.
BUT I DID NOT GIVE UP.
I decided to get lost instead. Typical, I know.
I’d like to say I’m about to deliver some original
philosophy but I feel as if I’ve heard this somewhere else before….
The best way to discover a city (or city park) is to get lost in it.
I still refuse to ride the city bus without
having a friend to direct me where to go/get off/inform me when I’m
chewing my gum too loudly.
But feeling super adventurous (and frustrated with the gym), I
hid my sweatshirt in a random bush and started running in a TBD (to be
discovered) direction. I suppose saying
that I got “lost” is a bit deceiving. I
was lost for about 5 minutes until I started recognizing a few familiar
places I've passed on the bus before. A few
miles later, I realized I was almost to City Center.
While I do thoroughly enjoy the quaint city of Christchurch
and its quirky shops composed of shipping containers, I decided to take a
turn and run into Hagley Park. Hagley Park is still as foreign to me as NYC’s
Central park and not at all large in comparison, but here I did find myself getting lost… I can’t say I
minded getting lost in its breathtaking botanic gardens.
Best accomplishment of the day: I found SWINGS.
Age 2 or 20, I will never lose my love for swings. It was also here that I made my toddler
friends. Interestingly enough, this was
the second time I’ve run into kids under the age of 10 with no parents in sight. This, along with the fun fact that hitchhiking
is actually a thing here (and is considered safe) speaks for the friendly
demeanor of New Zealand. If only the
ambiance of this place was a souvenir I could package in bubble wrap and bring
back to the States with me. I wouldn’t
mind if alpacas could fit in a suitcase either.
Going off the main path, I found one of the smaller gardens with a (rather charming)
pool to chill by and recharge. At this
point, I still had little idea of where I was and how to get back to the road,
but because I had zero care I made no attempt to
move. I instead made an important
decision:
I like it here. A
lot.
I could have used big fancy adjectives and run-on sentences
to describe how I feel, but I’d rather be short and sweet in honor of true Kiwi
language. I dictate this as Kiwi
language because of the ingenious “Don’t be a dick” signs I’ve see in multiple
shops, buses, etc.
It’s kind of funny how some of the most chatty and outspoken
folks are also the most introverted. And
how some of the most seemingly confident people are the most uncertain. I think it’s safe to say that I just
described a decent amount of people.
And I bring this up, as this is a place that has inspired my inner being to mirror my outer. It's like winning the lottery to be in a place where I don’t need to hold back in being myself. I kind of hate getting personal, especially in a public setting such as my Internet blog, but this has been an extremely important part of my experience in New Zealand so far, one that is worth sharing.
And I bring this up, as this is a place that has inspired my inner being to mirror my outer. It's like winning the lottery to be in a place where I don’t need to hold back in being myself. I kind of hate getting personal, especially in a public setting such as my Internet blog, but this has been an extremely important part of my experience in New Zealand so far, one that is worth sharing.
That being said, one last cheesy-ish thought:
Getting lost might be the best approach to finding your
way. Go figure.
Keep Happy,
Em