Archive for the ‘sports’ Category

Hang on for Hang Ten

Friday, September 21st, 2007

beach in Sydney for travel blog ususbaby.com

I have issues. (I know, nothing new to most of you…)

Really, though. Ever since I went surfing in the sport’s birthplace of Hawaii a few years ago, convincing myself to get back on a board in other spots has been quite…um, tough. It isn’t just that the waves were gentler and broke further out than any other place I’ve been — both which are things a beginner like me appreciates — but it basically boils down to the water temperature (SO nice in HI). I hate being cold. And trying to paddle with cold hands…brrr! (And yes, the water in Southern California does get cold)

That’s why even when I went to a few beautiful beaches in Sydney — even the popular surf spot, Bondi Beach — I didn’t rent a board. Even with a wetsuit, the prospect of getting into water when I’ve just pulled out a winter coat and gone shopping for a new sweater…just not enticing.

But, really, come on. It’s not that cold. I must stop being a wuss. Someone PLEASE convince me to get on a wave here.

9 Reasons Why Every American College Student Should Study Abroad

Wednesday, September 19th, 2007

monkey in Bali, Indonesia

Returning to my land of study abroad, I can’t help but be SO glad I did it. In fact, I’d say my decision to study abroad is my second-best choice I’ve made in life.

Why don’t more Americans do it? Don’t know…but I do know plenty of 20-somethings who regret not doing it.

So if you know any young Yanks contemplating it, I’ve come up with a great list to convince them to go:

1. Making out with non-Americans. Remember in Love, Actually when Collin wants to go to the US because he thinks he’s “got a cute British accent”? Well, yeah, he does. And, yeah, you’ll have a cute American one too. Even in countries where they hate American politicians, there’s always going to be quite a few who’ll swoon over an American accent/face/fashion sense. And even if you hate dating, well, it’ll still probably happen.

2. A friend’s a friend forever…and wherever they live, you can visit. Visit your new international friends wherever they head back to — from upstate New York to Sydney (see photo below) to the Maldive Islands…

3. “Yes, I’m American.” Good, bad, hilarious…you’ll see how others see us. College students in any country aren’t known for being the most shy bunch. You may be asked how many times you’ve been sued, how many guns your family owns, or how many celebrities you’ve met in your life…all things related to, of course, how they see us.

4. It’s all fun and games. Playing sports, especially American-invented ones, abroad brings a whole new appreciation for international sports competitions. Note to self: on international basketball courts, the lanes are trapezoids…

5. Parlez-vous francais? Instead of your only memory of French being that learning it made you wake up every day at 7 a.m. for three semesters, studying abroad can give you the chance to be fluent in it. And besides that…Americans really need to learn more languages. Really.

6. Money, money, money. Traveling on a student budget seems like a deal sure to break the bank, right? Well, maybe not. Non-need based financial aid can mean a profit if the school you attend has a lower tuition and lower cost of living. When I studied abroad, I took three week-long trips to see both of Australia’s coasts and a trip to Bali (see photo above); even with those trips and my international flight, I spent the same amount I would’ve just going to classes and living in Missouri for that semester. Of course, the exchange rate is not-so great here anymore, but there are still other places where it’s not so bad. Wherever you choose, though, even if it’s uber-expensive London, it will be cheaper to live there as a student than it will be to vacation there as an adult.

7. Let’s broaden our minds. Even if you go to a 25,000+ university, there’s classes there you can’t take. Australian Literature and Film? Definitely not offered at University of Missouri. Offered at Edith Cowan University in Perth, Australia? Yep. And world history in another country? Definitely not the same world history you’ll get back home.

8. Drinking! Not only can you legally drink in most countries before 21, but you’ll come back with: 1) new drinking games 2) new and different drinks you like and/or 3) new words for drinking…all which are great things to pull out back at college bars/parties in the states. (Or if you’re the goody-two-shoes like I was, only 2 will apply to you because you only had one drink over the whole six months…)

9. All the cool kids are doing it.

Jayna Rust and Aung at the Harbour Bar

An Americanized Bloke

Thursday, September 13th, 2007

What makes one of Australia’s most popular athletes tick? Lots of American things, apparently…

West Coast Eagles ruckman Dean Cox (who’ll be trying to lead his team to the Australian Football League final tomorrow night) was Q and A’d for The Sun-Herald’s September 9 K-Zone section. So much of what he said revolved around our little ol’ country:

“What music are you pumping?
Everything at the minute. I love my iPod.”

“Who’s the most famous person you’ve ever met?
Probably Jamie Foxx when I was in America last year.”

“If you could trade places with anyone for a day who would you choose and why?
Michael Jordan because I have admired him ever since he started playing basketball. Also, a dream of mine was to play in the NBA.”

Yeah…the kid must really love all things American. I mean, who doesn’t?

The Key to a Girl’s Heart

Wednesday, September 5th, 2007

key chain in Bangkok

Last time I’d stayed at this guesthouse in Bangkok (when I was there two months ago), they handed me a standard wooden keychain with my room number on it. I guess the room 39 key must’ve gotten lost at some point because this time I was handed a key strung onto a keychain with a baseball mitt and red-and-white baseball with “New York” printed all over it.

Ah…baseball and New York…two of my favorite things in America. Mmm, but generally not together…

Tag-Teamin’ Cambodia

Thursday, August 30th, 2007

WWE on TV in Siem Reap

You know what Cambodians love? Wrestling. Not like the short-and-skinny-college-guys-in-unitards wrestling, either. But WWE wrestling.

On my first night in Phnom Penh, one of the guys in the restaurant turned on a fight and settled in to watch. Out of all the things on TV, I couldn’t believe he chose to watch that. But he did. Then the next day, I saw that a car in town had a wrestling sticker on its hood. Later, I found this recent Cambodia Daily article that talks about the sport’s following here. And tonight when I got out of the shower, guess what was on again (and is still on).

All this popularity and there’s not even Hulk Hogan* for them to watch…craziness.

wresting sticker on car in Phnom Penh

*Embarrassing fact that I probably shouldn’t reveal about myself but will anyways: In Chiang Mai I went to a pub quiz night, and the only answers I could properly contribute to involved Hulk Hogan and Wham!

Rollin’ down the Trip

Wednesday, August 29th, 2007

Even after living two blocks from the Strand for the past four years, I never rollerbladed on the famous beach boardwalk. I’m horrible at it and terribly clumsy. However, I always enjoyed sitting at any of the beaches or beach-front houses or restaurants and watching the people blade by. Usually it was only two groups of people who strapped on these boots for a skate on the Strand…either the die-hard South Bay For Life women who had been skating on the Strand since roller skates were the thing or the young Midwest or East Coast transplants who grew up rollerblading.

In Cambodia’s Phnom Penh, it’s obviously a different kind of person skating than what I’d gotten used to seeing in L.A. Still, though, the kids at the country’s only (for now) true mall, love it. And people love watching. As I’ve finally figured out how to upload video (which will I’m sure become a dangerous addiction in the future), I thought I’d record a bit of what I saw. It’s a pretty short clip, but I also wanted to make sure you could hear the music in the background. Ten points for the first person to name that song.

Forget About It?

Monday, August 27th, 2007

photo Hoan Kiem Lake in Hanoi for travel blog

landscaper checks a tree trimming at the Temple of Literature

our tour guide waits for a few kayakers to return in Ha Long Bay

view from my hotel on Cat Ba Island

another view from my hotel on Cat Ba Island

In my first couple of months at the University of Missouri, I was quickly indoctrinated into the Missouri/Kansas rivalry. Although most of the rivalry is now just good-hearted sports competition, when I set foot in Lawrence for the yearly football game, I was reminded that there’s far more history between the schools than just football and basketball. Making my way into kU’s Memorial Stadium, we were accosted by little blue and red brats who snatched every piece of MU gear from us that they could…but they were nothing compared to the woman I met moments later. This 90ish-year-old woman (I’m not exaggerating) started yelling at us in the worst profanities possible, and she definitely wasn’t just talking smack about our quarterback. I couldn’t believe this woman, who was older than my grandma, could have such a foul vocabulary and such hatred for us Missourians. But she did.

When I later reflected on that experience, I realized that this woman grew up back when the rivalry was fresh. Although she had missed being born during the Civil War, she likely would’ve heard about the pre-war border battles throughout her childhood. (The MU/kU rivalry is rooted in the fact that Missouri was a slave state and Kansas was a free state and there were many attacks on each others’ soil — including the university cities…both universities’ mascots are named from their city’s actions before the Civil War — Columbians defending themselves from the free-state attacks called themselves Tigers, and the attackers from Lawrence were called Jayhawks because they were thieves, looters, and general ruffians) And so, although my first trip to Kansas in 1999 was more than 100 years after the end of the Civil War (in which both states had been in the Union), it seems it was a war that not all have forgotten.

Although this was a rare incidence in the Midwest, there are other Civil War memories living on in other parts of the States. Head up into any of the large northern cities, and you’d best never be wearing a Confederate flag…even as a “souvenir.” Or just try roaming through Georgia and the Carolinas spouting off how brilliant a man William Tecumseh Sherman was. Not wise, my friend.

So what does this have to do with my travels? Well, as I made my way through Vietnam, the locals all tried to reassure me that the war was over. It was history. All’s well. “We’re friendly now,” said Binh, the guide I had for the Cu Chi Tunnels. They all seem to want to forget the war (except to make money from it). But as I saw reminder after reminder of the war, I can’t believe it’s becoming a foggy memory. The accounts of the violence of the 60s and 70s aren’t hiding themselves anywhere, and there is still so much evidence of the north/south division in mindset.

The pictures throughout this post are photos I took in the north to send back to an ex-coworker who wanted to see what I’d see in his home country. This Vietnamese man had grown up in his country’s south and had never seen the north. I don’t know if he ever will, either. As with many southerners, a trip to Hanoi is still a political statement they aren’t eager to make. So seeing Hoan Kiem Lake or Ha Long Bay, isn’t something that they’re going to do.

Because try as we might, people don’t forget.

For me, that was why I felt I had to go to Vietnam. It was a place that my father had been, years ago…more than a decade before my birth and adoption, but it was a place that I can’t help but believe was a huge part in shaping the man I love and admire today. And it is his reluctance to remember that made me want to know. It was his avoidance of ever talking about the War that made me not talk to my parents for weeks, just so I wouldn’t have to tell them where I was. And it was my sadness for what he involuntarily saw and endured there that left me blinking back tears for the two hours I sat in the airport waiting to fly into Hanoi. And although I know I was probably more emotional than others, I know I’m not alone in wanting to remember. In Hanoi, I met an American guy whose grandfather was killed here; in Saigon, my American roommate’s father too was in the war and refused to talk about it. And at the Tunnels, an American veteran joined our tour as well. We were all there to remember or try to know why someone doesn’t want to remember.

And so, I don’t think we humans ever forget. We try. But sometimes that only makes the memories linger on beyond ourselves.

And try as Binh does, he can’t forget either. With the war 30 years in his past, he still drinks himself to sleep every night. He tries to erase the memories of the dead American soldiers whose first dog tag he slipped into their mouthes and the second he pocketed to send back to their families in the USA. But still he sees them. Alcohol only lasts for a while. When he’s awake the memories are there, and so fresh he can still sing along to the words of John Denver’s “Take Me Home, Country Roads,” listened to by the American soldiers during the war.

And will his son, who never lived through the war, forget? Can he forget that his father saw more violence at age 18 than we will ever see in our lifetime? Can he forget that his father was sent away to a re-unification/re-education camp and used as a human land-mine clearing tool for years, only to return to his now-motherless family? Can he forget that, because of his southern ties, the only job his father could later get was as a tour guide…and was therefore daily forced to relive the horrors of war while laughing tourists pay a few dong to shoot machine guns off into the forest? I doubt it. And even though Binh tells me he never has talked to his son about the war, I’m sure his son will still remember it. And like some generations of Americans have carried scars from the 1800s, I’m sure many Vietnamese (and Americans) will bear these for years, too.

So it was for Binh, his son, my father, and everyone else who bears this history that I couldn’t forget or blink back my sadness anymore but wiped away tear after tear as I rode a bus out of Vietnam.

photo of Cat Ba Island for travel blog

Goal?

Sunday, July 1st, 2007

I’m tired. My sister just left after her week-long visit which had us traipsing all over Seoul and visiting Jeju Island, Korea’s version of Hawaii (thus why there were so few posts last week). But running all over is just part of my exhaustion.

Before starting our first full day in Jeju, I decided to take advantage of the hotel’s gym and get in my first real workout of the trip. Arriving to the small workout area, I walked in to see three men all clad in kelly green shorts and jerseys look up at me. It was two of Iraq’s national football/soccer players and one of their coaches. I wasn’t too surprised…I’d seen signs throughout the hotel directing them where to eat and players and coaches waiting in the lobby for their buses. They were there to play Korea’s team (who was also staying at our hotel) in a “friendly” exhibition match at the nearby stadium that had been used for the 2002 World Cup.

Although I’d planned on just doing a run on the treadmill, I decided not to once I realized the Iraqi player would be running right next to me and could easily see my horrendously low speed and laugh. Instead, I decided to work on my upper body and settled into the butterfly press machine. Sadly, though, my struggle with the machine was probably more laughable than my slow speed. For some reason, I couldn’t figure out why it had multiple points of rotation or even which handles I should use.

Seeing my mishaps, the coach came over and explained how I should do it. After seeing I’d figured it out, he decided to put me through a workout. In between directions to the players, he’d walk over and adjust the weight on various machines and tell me how many reps and sets I should do after finishing on the machine I was using. Although I’d done my share of bench presses, I figured I should do as he said…I mean it’s not every day I have an Olympic-level coach working with me. Seeing their coach helping me, the players looked at me curiously but said nothing. I wondered what they were thinking of me and my obviously American accent…are they pro-American or do they just wish we’d get the hell out of their country? Although I really wanted to ask, I figured such conversation wasn’t light gym banter.

Later, I looked a little more into Iraq’s football team history. As I thought, until recently, the team had been controlled by Saddam Hussein’s people. His eldest son, Uday, had presided over the Olympic and national teams and athletes. In 2003, Sports Illustrated ran an article quoting sources accusing Uday of severe and sometimes lethal punishments for poor performance, often telling them they’d embarrassed or disgraced the country. Four months after the story ran, Uday was killed in a battle with American forces in northern Iraq. Apparently now, Iraq has created a new Olympic-governing committee, one that is overseen by a democratically elected official.

That night I watched part of the game on TV. Korea definitely had a home-town advantage and in the second half out-played their opponents and took many more shots on goal, easily winning 3-0. but seeing the Iraqi football players in person I was a bit surprised how much they didn’t act like so many of the professional American athletes I’d worked with as a sports reporter in the states. Even without the fear that Uday apparently instilled, I don’t think they ever disgraced their country in their time in Korea…there was no trash-talking when they’d pass their opponents in the halls, no players drunkenly yelling to each other from the bar, or even advances made toward any of the Korean girls and women hanging around outside the hotel who’d come to gawk and fawn over the Korean players and their European coaches.

Later, my thoughts wandered back to the political ties that engulf both our countries. If they truly were playing as free men and now without fear of governmental repercussions, I guessed these were the first people I’d encountered who’d directly benefited from America’s War in Iraq. Did they see it that way, too? Or did they think the US’ invasion was a complete sham and mistake, as many Americans now seem to believe?

By the time I hit the gym yesterday morning, Iraq’s team was likely long gone. I went through a workout similar to the day before, still wondering exactly what those players and coaches think of us…and with two trips to the gym and a mindful of questions, I’m exhausted.

America’s Pasttime

Monday, June 18th, 2007

Game between Kia Tigers and LG Twins

In the summer, there’s no better way to spend a Sunday afternoon than at the ballpark. Whether it’s at Ralph & Debbie Taylor Stadium, Busch, or even the Stadium at Seoul’s Sports Complex, a baseball game is a relaxing way to spend a weekend afternoon.

Watching yesterday’s game in Seoul, I had a great time, but I couldn’t help but want to hide from the three obnoxiously drunk American military guys behind me. It was their first time at a Korean game, and I don’t knowif they realized their trash talking was actually making them sound like arrogant idiots. Yes, Korean professional baseball isn’t at the same caliber of the MLB, but is it really necessary to keep telling the players “you’re not even AA”?

Oddly, though, I think I was the only one who minded. Most people just ignored them, but the not-as-drunk (and definitely not-as-obnoxious guy) got the number of some Korean girl who came up to hit on him. Which made me wonder, is the Ugly American not so ugly here?

Baseball stadium

Hoop it Up!

Thursday, June 7th, 2007

Jayna Rust in front of a basketball goal in Qinhuangdao, China

While exploring China, I’ve been surprised at how much the country has embraced basketball. It’s everywhere: parks, military academies, at tourist spots. I suppose I shouldn’t be so surprised, though; the sport is just about as old here as in the US. James Naismith birthed basketball in 1891, and later that decade American missionaries brought the sport to China. (Ah, nothing like using a little sport to bring people into your religion…) So, even though their professional league is much younger than the sport’s birth country’s, it appears that Chinese love basketball just as much…if not more. Evidence? Here’s some pictures I snapped across China…

Click on the thumbnails below to see the pictures full size:

Nike courts in Beijing, China Nike-sponsored courts in Beijing

Forbidden City basketball You know the famous Mao Zedong portrait? This is what’s on the other side of that wall.

kids playing basketball in Qinhuangdao, China kids playing at People’s Park in Qinhuangdao

basketball court in Qinhuangdao a court outside of a Qinhuangdao apartment building

basketball at Beidaihe basketball goals at the beach in Beidaihe

school yard court a ripped-down goal at an elementary school in Xi’an

basketball court at a military training area courts inside a military training place in Jiuzhaigou

inside Jiuzhaigou a lone goal on a parking lot inside Jiuzhaigou Valley