Disclaimer

Disclaimer: Everything posted here is original work unless otherwise noted. Please ask permission to use my writing or photos--I'll probably say yes, and it is the right thing to do. Thanks, Kaitlin

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Viaggiare Diventa La Mia Vita

Viaggiare diventa la mia vita: Traveling becomes my life.

People don't always get it--my complete obsession with travel. My mom knows I have wanderlust, but I don't think she overly approves of my constant desire to be somewhere else. It really isn't a desire so much as a need; it has taken me a few years to realize that travel is my life's drug. My health and wellbeing is directly tied to foreign soil and the adventures found there. 

When I envision my future life (which I am doing daily now that I am a directionless and lost graduate), I see a petite home--perhaps a brick townhouse with little to no yard space. Inside, the place is a history of my travels. A depository of glass from Venice, trinkets from the Caribbean, wooden bowls from Africa. A library of travel guides from all my favorite places. The walls are covered with art from talented nobodies found in Florence, Jamaica, New Zealand. My photographs are everywhere, showing my life over the years through the places I have been and the people I have met. 

I began reading "Eat, Pray, Love" by Elizabeth Gilbert a few days ago (you may recall I attempted to start it after returning from Italy, but had to put it down after the first line made me want bolt for the airport). On page 41 was the following paragraph:

"...Traveling is the great true love of my life. I have always felt...that to travel is worth any cost or sacrifice. I am loyal and constant in my love for travel, as I have not always been constant in my other loves. I feel about travel the way a happy new mother feels about her impossible, colicky, restless newborn baby--I just don't care what it puts me through. Because I adore it. Because it's mine."

Liz put into words what I haven't been able to verbalize so succinctly for myself: travel is the love of my life. It will never leave me or leave me wanting. I will always be satisfied and enraptured by travel. It will be my constant companion for the rest of my life. 

Come hell or high water, I will always find the time and resources to simply go. 

Monday, December 13, 2010

I Miss "Ciao Bella"

First, if you haven't purchased a cheap Christmas gift for yourself, may I recommend an enticing read: my thesis. Purchased easily for download from Lulu.com (the link will take you straight there). All $3 of my profit goes to my Return to Italy fund. Now for the good stuff....

Today I chatted with Danny online--my human connection to 'la terra della mia vita'. This is a rare pleasure for me, thanks to my booked schedule these last few weeks before graduation, and the six hour time difference. It was 7:30 p.m. here, 1:30 a.m. there. The conversation was brief, but bright. My impending graduation, his recent move to the heart of Florence (a mere 5 minutes from our meeting place of SMN--that would be Piazza Santa Maria Novella), his love for snow, my search for employment. 

And then he says he needs to go to bed (exam to study for in the morning). "Ciao bella!" he writes. 
The wave of crushing longing that had been held back fairly securely was released.

Golden sunlight making the unremarkable Arno River turn dazzling. 

The cool marble counters and polished brass fixtures inside the espresso bar at Piazza della Repubblica. 

Pizzeria Dante, with the to-die-for quattro stagioni pizza and delicious all-you-can-drink table wine.

The David positioned at the end of the Accademia gallery under a glass dome, Michelangelo's masterpiece. 

The smell of the leather market by San Lorenzo, still open in the pouring rain. The vendors shouting and haggling with customers, and adjusting their tarps to keep the goods dry. 

Gelato at La Carraia, enjoyed with friends on the ponte watching the sunset gloriously and the lights on the Ponte Vecchio flicker on. Every night a different show.


Piazza Santa Maria Novella. The number of times I waited there, excited beyond measure. The random evening photo shoot with friends. I crossed the piazza on the way to catch my weekend trains. I watched a street musician give an impromptu concert on the lawn. Saw lovers young and old holding hands, chatting and laughing. So much happiness there. 

So in the words of my Facebook status from long ago: 
"Per cui avete fame? Viaggio? Arte? Amore? Alimenti la tua anima. Sia felice."
What are you hungry for? Travel? Art? Love? Feed your soul. Be happy.

I'm hungry for Florence. Too bad my local grocery doesn't have Italy Shake-n-Bake available. 

Florence has bewitched me. I will never be the same again. 

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Making a Viral Video: An Experiment

My Interdisciplinary Media Studies class has been charged with making a video go viral. So here is my team's attempt to create a video interesting enough to catch the attention of the world...

For every action there is always an equal and opposite reaction.--Newton’s Law. Though we hear of the sad and terrible events happening around the world, there is an equal amount of joy and happiness to be found even if we aren’t reminded of it every day. For each 9/11, earthquake, hurricane, war, life lost, remember that the balance is restored with every smile and every laugh.

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

A Bird With Two Homes

It is officially done. Thirteen weeks of fast and furious writing effort have culminated in the digital publishing of my 54-page narrative, titled A Bird With Two Homes.  It is available for PDF download at Lulu.com for $5.50. (Click here to access the page). 


I initially intended to publish it here on my blog in volumes, but after realizing the amount of time and effort I have put into the piece, I decided that it is important for me to receive some financial compensation. (In case you are curious, I will make about $3 per download.)


Interestingly, A Bird With Two Homes is the first narrative about Cinque Terre available with the online publishing company. With luck, that will help my story get found! 


I am so happy with the finished product, and hope you will be as well. 


The following is an excerpt from the first pages of the final copy as an enticement to download the full thing, of course.
----

I am two hours and 53 minutes into my three-hour journey, sitting on a damp seat for the seven-minute trip from La Spezia to Cinque Terre—Riomaggiore, specifically. Everything is black as the train speeds through the five-minute long tunnel. Fluorescent lighting flickers on and off intermittently. The train car is old, a little musty. My friend Lauren sits across from me, listening to her iPod. Months ago when I made my hostel reservation, I booked it for two, hoping I would find someone to join me. I was thrilled when Lauren—with her can-do attitude, easy smile, and corn silk blond hair—wanted to come along.
Italy has been on my radar since I saw a picture of Michelangelo’s David in middle school, but I had never even heard of Cinque Terre until a few months prior to leaving. Flipping through television channels one day, I stopped when I saw images of a coastal town with stunning cliffs. PBS had the amiable travel guru Rick Steves enjoying lemon gelato and discussing the local charm and beauty of Cinque Terre. I was riveted, hanging on to Steves’ every word. Enchanted by Steves’ description of a Vespa-free world featuring locally made vino bianco and views of the sea rivaled only by the cliff towns of the Amalfi Coast in the south, I went to my local library to check out every Cinque Terre travel item—videos, books, histories, novels, and even music CDs—the city of Lexington, Kentucky offered. In the end, After the PBS special and research, I decided it would be Steves’ Italy 2010 guidebook that would lead me to the best sights and experiences Italy has to offer.
Looking down, Steves’ book is in my hands, poised and ready to direct me to the hostel’s realty company. It already shows wear after two weeks of city life in my temporary home city of Florence. The Cinque Terre section looks like a well-loved textbook: highlights, circles, side-notes, and reservation numbers fill the pages.  Suddenly there is a flash of light. I straighten and gaze intently out of the window. We are almost there. 

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

The Start of Something Wonderful?

Plenty of news so I am going for the bulleted list:


#1 I am 3 weeks from finishing my Thesis. I will be publishing it on Lulu.com for your reading pleasure (with a few enticing snippets here to make you want the rest). The cost will be somewhere around the $8-$10 mark, depending on the number of pages. I would love to make it color so I can include pictures, but that would shoot the price up considerably. So that will probably not happen.


#2 Spoke with Danny the other day--his birthday was yesterday; I wish I could have been in Florence to celebrate with him!


#3 I am leaving for Orlando, Florida in 4 hours to visit an old friend. Can't wait to revisit Disney World and reminiscence about the "good old days". And get warm again. 


#4 (The BIG news) It has been decided, after much consideration, that I am going to begin selling my photography. Readers of my blog, friends, and family have told me over and over again that I need to share my work with others. After finding a good watermark program, I am in the process of starting a website that will let me sell my photographs on note cards or as individual prints.


For years I have been signing my photo cards as .K. Photography or .K. Card Creations, so why not make it a reality? With graduation looming, the idea that I could use photography as a way to finance my travels is encouraging. So below is a sample of what I am going to sell--consider it a belated tour of Italy : ) 


Venetian Window

Santa Croce

On the streets of Florence, near Il Duomo

Palazzo Strozzi

Over the Arno at Sunset

Resting in Manarola

Chapel of Riomaggiore

Venice

Venice

Dusk overlooking Ponte Santa Triníta and Ponte Vecchio

Monday, October 18, 2010

Aren't we all just a bunch of depressed monkeys

An apology for the rambling post, but it involves Italy, therefore it must be posted!


So today I mentioned in my Facebook status how I wanted #1 an espresso #2 a nap and #3 to finish my thesis. An old friend commented that I had the order wrong--that I should nap first, then have an espresso. Wrong! It is perfectly acceptable to have an espresso and then enjoy nap time. I learned from the best: Danny Salti. Then, Amy (a fellow Italy study abroader) wrote how she wanted to go back.


This made me realize the following: Aren't we all just a bunch of depressed monkeys? I have never seen a group of students so miserable to be home in my entire life. Italy was too wonderful--we got spoiled. I want to be spoiled again.


We've been back for 9 weeks. That is one week longer than we were in Italy. Re-entry shock is still in full swing and I am convinced I will never be over it. 


I saw 'Eat. Pray. Love.' this weekend (took me long enough), which brought Rome and Naples to life again. The food! The noise! The hand gestures! Ahh. I miss it. My thesis is coming along steadily; I am at 16 pages single spaced, so you will soon have a lot of writing to enjoy. I have to say, it is my best work to date. 







Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Potential Beginning...

I have drafted a possible introduction to my thesis... Enjoy! 




Cinque Terre.
The acoustics of the name seems to suggest a promise. Cheen-kwuh Tairrr-uh. Its name rolls off the tongues of Italians like musical notes from wind chimes. The translation is simple, direct: Five Lands. The name dates to before the fifteenth century, but evidence of civilization in this remote area of Italy’s northwest coast dates to times before the ancient Romans. Surrounding the villages with a lush green halo are the steep but fertile terraces of grape vines, olive and citrus trees. And for the past three thousand years, the Ligurian Sea has borne witness to the comings and goings of the area, bringing fisherman’s boats and pirates’ ships to safe harbor or a deep grave below the teal waves.
Cinque Terre is a vertical place in a horizontal country. Tuscany, Lazio—these regions are all hills and plains. A photographer naturally wants to capture the sweeping, broad vistas of the Florentine valley and Roman cityscape with panoramic shots. Golden sunlight glints off of dust in the warm, dry air and takes you into classic fantasies of Italy.
But Cinque Terre is vertical. It is like a sculptor from the Renaissance hacked at the coastline with his chisel without smoothing his work. Roughhewn pietra serena cliffs rise from the Ligurian Sea straight to the heavens, with five narrow enclaves tumbling down to the water’s edge. Buttery yellow and fruit-colored houses are cradled in the safety of the valleys, few venturing higher than a particular point that residents must have agreed upon decades ago.
Vernazza's Harbor
Though the name Cinque Terre is used for these five sea towns, the landscape, people and culture are not to be construed as similar. From north to south they boast names that tell the towns’ unique history. Monterosso’s ‘mountains’ turn a spectacular shade of red with the sunset, hence its name ‘Mount Red’. Vernazza, wanting to lay claim to its incredible white wine vernaccia, named the town in honor of its chief export—Vernazza comes from the Latin root verna—“of the land” or “native”. Then there is Corniglia, simply named after the prosperous farmer Cornelius who tamed this rocky terrain. The large water wheel of Manarola’s mill inspired is nome, morphing from the Latin magna rota to its current dialectical form. And finally there is Riomaggiore, paying homage to the “Big River” the residents tamed to build their village. 

Less than a mile separates Monterosso from Riomaggiore, but it takes six hours to hike that single mile—a testament to the wild, untamed nature of this place. It wasn’t until a train line was cut through the rocky cliffs and unconventional travel became popular, that these quaint, picturesque towns became destinations on tourists’ maps.
In fact, that is why I am here on this train. Rick Steves’ PBS specials and Italy 2010 guidebook sparked my interest months ago, convincing me to travel the three hours by train from Florence to see the “Five Lands” myself. After two weeks of city life in my temporary home city of Florence, Steves’ description of a Vespa-free world featuring locally made vino bianco and views of the sea rivaled only by the cliff towns of the Amalfi Coast has had me itching to leave for days.
I am two hours and 53 minutes into my journey, sitting on a somewhat damp seat for the seven-minute journey from La Spezia to Cinque Terre—Riomaggiore, specifically. Everything is black outside the train car. Fluorescent lighting reflects my face on the glass windows, flickering on and off intermittently. The train car is old, a little musty, but serves its purpose. My friend Lauren sits across from me, listening to her iPod and holding her hot pink travel pack on her lap. Months ago when I made my hostel reservation, I went ahead and booked it for two, hoping I would find someone to join me. I was thrilled when Lauren—with her can-do attitude, easy smile, and corn silk blonde hair—wanted to join me. We will be staying in Riomaggiore for three days and two nights. Rick’s guide said Riomaggiore has a lot of local flavor, and I’ve been craving some local flavor and fewer tourists after exposure to cities like Venice and Munich.
Suddenly there is a flash of light. I straighten and gaze intently out of the window. We are almost there.
At the next flash of light, I am prepared to catch the view: dramatic and dazzling, the Ligurian Sea stretches out, robin’s egg blue with white caps lazily rolling onto a rock beach just visible below. I hear the screech of the wheels as the brakes are applied. The train lurches to a halt and I blink as my eyes adjust to the light. Exiting the train car, Lauren and I step onto Riomaggiore’s platform. A waist-high wall protects us from a precipitous drop into the clear waters below. I am finally able to drink in the commanding view of the Mediterranean after the brief teasing glimpses on the train. The land tumbles straight down into the teal liquid glass below.
Unreal. Lauren and I smile, high fiving each other for a location well chosen. Words aren’t necessary as we file into the crowd of visitors carrying cameras, toting official-looking hiking gear, and rolling bags that would never fit into an airplane’s overhead compartment bin.  

Friday, October 1, 2010

And now, I wait.

Fall arrived to Oxford last Saturday with sunshine, clear skies, and a light breeze. It was a divine day, but as I pulled on my green sweater and jeans, I felt miserable. Alessandro had asked me to take him to Cincinnati to catch the 6:30 pm Megabus to Chicago. I was supposed to help him leave me. 


Alessandro and I became almost brother and sister during his two-week visit. He was constant entertainment and fun--always willing and happy to see me. His final week, I saw him every night except Tuesday. We'd go out to dinner, visit the Rec Center, he cooked dinner for me, I'd drive him home after partying Uptown, we went on a walk one evening and then sat on a bench on High Street and talked while we people-watched. We had a big reunion of the summer program students at Skipper's, and it was so great to have (almost) everyone together again. 


I pulled up to the Clinton's house where he was staying and parked the car. I went ahead and popped the trunk hatch so we could get his luggage in the car. The door of the house was open, and I could hear everyone saying goodbye to Alessandro. "We'll miss you!" "Come back before going home, dude." "It has been great having you here!" 


I walked up to the entryway and stepped inside. I smiled at everyone and gave Ale (Ah-lay) a hug. And before I know it, we are in the car, luggage safely stored in the back of my Jetta, and are on the way to Cincinnati. 


We talked about a lot of things during the 45 minute drive. Cars and the Florence Program, I remember in particular. I wanted to drive slowly, extend my time with my friend, but when I get nervous I tend to have a heavy foot on the gas pedal. Ale's enthusiasm for the city was infectious. There was an event occurring in Paul Brown Stadium, and he drank in the scene of thousands of Americans walking toward the stadium, most people in red, white, black or a mix of the three. 


"This is what America is," he said, looking at the skyscrapers and the busy mix of people, cars, and officers trying to control the crowd. 


We circled the block a few times, looking for the bus stop and asking people if they knew where it was. Finally, I pull into a hotel drop-off area (the only available 'parking' with thousands of people in town for whatever event Paul Brown Stadium was having). 


I threw myself at Alessandro, and stood on my tip-toes to give him a proper hug goodbye. 


"I am going to miss you a lot," I told him. 


"You have the best chance of seeing me again of everyone, because you want to come to Florence again," he replied, smiling. 


He grabbed his rolling luggage bag, and started walking down the block. "Ciao, Kaitlin!" he said over his shoulder. I waved in acknowledgment, pulled away from the curb, and headed home, my car lighter, but my heart heavier.
---
Leaving Florence August 15th, I knew it wasn't really goodbye for good. Alessandro's arrival was something to look forward to--a reunion with Italy, in a way. With no plans for my next Italian encounter laid out, all I can do now is wait with great longing and impatience.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

In search of fulfillment and happiness

People take different roads seeking fulfillment and happiness. Just because they're not on your road doesn't mean they've gotten lost. ~H. Jackson Browne
My road to fulfillment and happiness.
-----     ------      ------     -----     ------    ------     -----
Brilliant quote. Totally feeling it right now, too. A lot of things have been going in my favor regarding a job search that will lead me back to "La Terra della mia VIta"--the Land of my Life--as I have begun calling Italy. 

#1 My friend gave me his Rosetta Stone Italian levels 1 through 5. He is the best, and I have already paid him with drinks and copious numbers of hugs and verbal thanks. Fluency in Italian would be a huge plus if I plan on moving there. 

#2 With the help of Alessandro as my advocate and my initiative to show my usefulness and worth, I am trying to be part of the Florence Program 2011. With luck, Dr. B (the program director) will find me useful enough to include as part of the staff this coming summer. 

#3 Along those lines, I have located two positions that would give me two months off--the flexibility I need to travel there as an assistant for the study abroad. 

#4 My friend was hired as a writer in Florence. I am going to see if he can get me an 'in' over there as well. Ideal!

#5 Almost all of my friends have faith I will succeed. That has to count for something. 

Even with all this positivity, if you know of any connection that can help me make it back to Italy, I would love your help. So send a message my way if you hear of anything! (And I have to say, you reading this is already a huge help to me, since it gives me proof of readership!)

Reunion

I drove to Cincinnati to meet my Italian for lunch last Wednesday, 18 hours after he landed. Panera Bread was a wise choice, since Alessandro is a health-conscious workout fiend. Seeing him through the glass of the restaurant, I jumped up in excitement as tears threatened to pour forth. He was wearing jeans and a white button-down shirt ("There is too much air conditioning here!" he said to me with a shrug.), looking just as I remembered. The only thing missing? Danny stuffed in his suitcase! 


On one hand, it felt like I had seen Alessandro the day before when I climbed into my cab on Via dei Serragli in the early hours of August 15. On the other hand, it felt like years since we'd met face to face. Amy, his Cincinnati hostess, came as well. It was a welcome reunion after weekends by myself in Oxford longing for the camaraderie of my 'amiche americane' and 'amico italiano' from the trip. 


What a week. Since his arrival, Alessandro has inspired a lot of gatherings and parties--house parties, bar meet-and-greets, dinners, dancing, and late night chats. It has been a blast. Take Saturday night for example:


I picked up Katie McC and went to Jason's house where Alessandro is living for his time in Oxford (he has his own bedroom and bathroom without rent). After stopping in at the Clinton's house to see Colleen and Connor and Kelsey N., We headed Uptown to Skipper's to meet Meghan, Karen, Lauren, Jen, Jenna, and Alyssa. Christina and Erich were working the bar, so a good 10% of the group was in one building. Not bad. We ended up going to Brickstreet so he could experience an American-style dance club and ran into Scott R. and Claire C. on the dancefloor. Pretty good for one night out on the town.  


In fact, he's had so much fun, he may not go to Chicago this coming weekend. I hope he sticks around. I'm enjoying his company very much. At the same time, I have a ton of work to do. Being responsible is so over rated sometimes...

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Dear Armani: Thank you.

Dear Armani--

Thank you.

Love, 
Kaitlin

This photo was not taken by me. Unfortunately.
Copyright most likely belongs to  Armani.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Through New Eyes

Monday I was driving into Cincinnati along the two lane country road that is the only access point between middle-of-nowhere Oxford, Ohio and the Big City. I was singing to John Mayer and relaxing when a flash of yellow caught my eye. Sunflowers. A field of sunflowers. Just then, the sun came out from behind the clouds, and thousands of dew drops lit up the world, becoming a coat of diamonds. The field of golden flowers glittered, shining with its own light. And for a moment, I thought I was back on the train to Naples. I came back to reality as the field passed into my rearview mirror. The fleeting moment to Italy had passed. 
---------------------------------------------------------

In six hours, my friend Alessandro will be touching town onto American soil for the first time. He will be experiencing this place with fresh eyes, getting to know the people, the cities, the culture just as I learned about his. 


As I reflected on this walking across Miami University's campus this morning, I tried to look at it like I used to as a first year student.  I fell in love with this school five years ago, and, like a lot of things, time and familiarity had dulled the passion. The majestic oak trees with leaves on the verge of losing that summer green. Georgian style buildings of uniform height, harkening back to the university's 1809 roots. The remainders of the night's fog burning off in the early sunshine. It is all still there. It is all still lovely. I just haven't been looking. 


With Alessandro here, I am hoping I will rediscover what I love about living in the United States. Ever since coming 'home' from Italy, I've felt a little lost, a little depressed, and a little discontent with my current place in life. Maybe his 'child in a toy store' attitude will help me see the beautiful things again.

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Stick around, and I'll tell you (really, I promise)

Before I delve into the real topic of this post, a quick aside:


Was very tempted to get a kitten today. Then I realized I could buy two pairs of high heels for the cost of adoption, and not have to feed them.

I bought the heels. And 100 prints of my favorite Italy pictures.




Now then, onto the real topic...


As of Monday, I have embarked on the arduous task of remembering and chronicling every detail of my three trips to Cinque Terre. From the mojitos down to the color of the sunsets. And let's not forget Ivo's strawberry plant with its two flowers. Or the potted aloe. 


By December 1st I will have created a narrative nonfiction journalistic tribute to the unique lifestyle of the people of Cinque Terre. They deal with crazy tourists tramping through their home virtually every day April through September, and yet they manage to respect nature and maintain their community values in the wake of great change. 


It's a huge undertaking, and I can tell you sorting the notes is a daunting task already. So many irrelevant scribbles in Moleskine notebooks and on journalist pads (often written on Bar Centrale's patio with an espresso, as pictured), but added together the sentence fragments paint an amazing picture. I've caught myself reminiscing more than writing recently--not good for finishing, but very good for procrastinating. 


Here's a taste from my notecards:



 Bar Centrale looks and feels like a dive bar. A handmade sign stating “Order a Mojito… and NO we don’t have cigs so STOP ASKING,” makes me confident Lauren and I are about to experience something (good or bad, who knew).
A man with a goatee and “I chose to be” bald head expertly flips glasses and mixes cocktails. He is wearing a boyishly inappropriate shirt that borrows the brand name Hello Kitty and turns it into Hello [insert female body part that rhymes with Kitty]. Even with that, he exudes authority, and there is no doubt he is the man in charge. 


Ciao, mia amore,” the goateed bartender says to a little girl. She is probably three years old, and clings desperately to her father’s neck as the bartender extends his hand over the bar to give her the change from an order.
“Che le dice?,” her father says to her. “Che le dice?”
“Grazie,” the little girl says, brown eyes never leaving her father as she reaches out for the money.
The bartender smiles and places the Euros into her chubby little hand. As soon as they turn to leave, he is mixing up something in a martini shaker, pouring it briskly into a tall glass, and heading out the door of Bar Centrale to deliver it to the patio, even as he shouts over his shoulder, “Hey, Aussie! I haven’t forgotten you,” which gets him a nod and grin from a young guy.
Lauren looks over at me with a puzzled expression.
“Yeah, he definitely sounds almost American,” I say in response.
The bartender’s fluent American-style English and Italian had me curious, as did the self-ingratiating sign about the mojitos, so I approached the bar with a friendly conversation opener in mind. After helping the Aussie as promised, he turns to Lauren and me.
“I’ll have a mojito, per favore,” I said, followed by, “What made you come and stay in Riomaggiore?”
He glances at me, looking me up and down slowly.
“Just because I speak English better than an American doesn’t mean I’m not local,” he says bluntly, with a hint of humor. But not much. “Sucks when an Italian can talk better than you, eh? I was born here in Riomaggiore.”
“What’s your name?” I asked, enjoying the banter. I watch him mull the fresh mint leaves with raw sugar crystals inside a glass.
“Stick around and I’ll tell you,” he says.



That's all for now, but stick around, and I'll tell you more. : )

Sunday, September 5, 2010

Never knew I could feel like this: Global readership is stroking my blogging ego

This is a shout out to those who have so kindly chosen to come visit this blog, even to those who mistakenly got here (though, they may have left and will never come back...).


I have started another blog called '^3' on Wordpress for a digital technology class. Today I wrote quite a lovely post about synergy and the readership of this blog, and how shocked and awed I was by the information I discovered. 



So, please, feel free to go forth and find out whose company you are in when you read 'La Vita al Sole'--it's pretty incredible. 

Saturday, September 4, 2010

"Dear America" and other great exchanges I've had recently


September 4


(To Alessandro) 

YOU are coming to Oxford so soon I can hardly stand it. I am SO excited. Just thought I should let you know that I miss you more than I miss gelato. And as you know, that is a whole lot. :P

[This began a 12-comment dialogue between us and Amy about his visit and when I will be taking him to go eat KFC 'from the source' as he says.]

September 2


Dear America, 


Karen ZimmermannEliza Cassidy and I are in agreement that the Italian tradition of 'siesta' between 1 and 3 is a superb idea. And that life here, well, is just a little too fast-paced for our liking. Karen is considering relocating to Italy to become a gelato-hoarding gypsy. I'm not to that point yet, but it shouldn't be long. So take a chill pill and give me my nap time. 


Love, Kaitlin and Company.


September 1


Currently suffering from insomnia courtesy of my espresso pot. I filled it for tomorrow and the scent caught me. I couldn't resist...