Miles Lewis said:I Don't even think of India, China or Africa to name but a few. Argentina is a playground compared to them.
I concur with Miles Lewis. Don't even think the above 3 if you need a reality check to handle Argentina.
Miles Lewis said:I Don't even think of India, China or Africa to name but a few. Argentina is a playground compared to them.
starlucia said:A few weeks ago, we came home from dinner to find that someone had taken a humongous, incredibly foul-smelling crap on the front step of our building. It wasn't dog feces, it was definitely of the human variety, and it sat there overnight, smelling up the entire lobby and elevator.
mendozanow said:Sounds like a trip on Greyhound in the US or Canada, but safer.
Altitude sickness at only 2,500 metres (pass from Chile to Mendoza, right?)? Better not go to Bolivia, amiga.
How many boyfriends did you have in 6 weeks? Should have stopped here in Mendoza for a day to have a "non-foreign" one.
Thanks for the non-visual visuals, like a drug trip I had in the 70´s.
Suerte amiga!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1
steveinbsas said:I've read enough of jrockstar's posts to know you might have been in for a (big?) surprise if he had known of your desire and actually made that stopover.
jrockstar80 said:i feel like i am learning valuable "dealing with things" skills from being here but i'm starting to question if it's really worth it. oddly i found out today 2 other expats i know are having the same feelings... then there is that other thread on here with people that have been here 5 years and 8 years talking about leaving... i mean, really, can i continue to expect 1-2 major crises per week here for the duration of my stay here?
Im curious where are u originally from?? what little town from the midwest?jrockstar80 said:(well, including one week in chile)
...crazy foreign boyfriends, crazy foreign roommates, infectious disease, being homeless (see: the aforementioned roommates), being extorted by villeros, altitude sickness, landslides, and bedbugs.
oh and on the bus back from chile today i sat next to an old woman who paid the blind man who jumped on to the bus at lujan to sell 3 pesos worth of cookies by telling him a 2-peso note was a 10-peso note, thus pocketing 7 pesos and the cookies.
is this normal for latin america or am i doing something wrong? i mean, i do like it here, but from a yanqui's perspective... this seems like... a lot of things have gone wrong. i need a reality check here...