19 More Things I Don't Understand

There are some things I understand. And there are some things I don't understand.

A couple years ago, I wrote down 19 things I don't understand. The time has come for 19 more. I don't understand the following:

1) Why the Philippines is spelled with a "Ph" and Filipino is spelled with an "F."

2) Why people believe that the month I was born is important. A lot of people say things to me like, "What's your sign?" I say, "Scorpio." And then they say, "Oh," and they make a bad face.

What the hell? First of all, astrology is idiotic. Secondly, idiotic or not, it's bullshit that I have a bad sign. Everyone hates Scorpio. I'm just happy I'm not Aquarius, since I have a phobia of the song "Aquarius" ever since the time I had a nightmare that a horrifying bald woman was floating above my bed singing the opening lines ("When the moooooon is in the seventh houuuuuse..."). I shuddered just writing that.

3) I don't understand why the Korean hairdresser's plant grew big and mine stayed little.

A few years ago, my sister visited me in LA and declared my apartment to be "depressing" because there was no decoration or anything. So she dragged me around the city buying stuff and now my apartment looks like a new-age Chinese library. One plus that came out of it was that she insisted we buy a living plant. We did, and I named him Stanley. I grew pretty attached to Stanley, and treated him like a king. I put him near the window, made sure there was a lot of CO2 everywhere, and even watered him regularly.

One day, I was walking down the street and passed a Korean beauty salon. In the salon, in front of the glass wall, was an identical Stanley plant, except it was huge. Like 6 feet tall. I rushed in and asked the woman how big it was when she first got it. She said it was 1 foot tall. So I was incredibly excited that Stanley was gonna get all big. Except now it's 2 years later, and Stanley's still a foot tall.

4) Why I lose a sock every laundry cycle. Every time I do laundry, I end up with one odd sock. Even though the only clothes that are being washed are clothes I've worn, and I never wear just one sock.

5) How they created accurate maps in the old days. Imagine being in a boat and going along some foreign shoreline for months and trying to create a large scale map of it, without computers or the ability to see it from above. I also don't really get how the explorers found their way back home. How do you go across the Atlantic Ocean, aiming for Spain, and actually end up in Spain? Something with the stars, I'm sure, but I don't really understand that either. And if you botch it and land in West Africa somewhere, it's not like you can ask someone where you are or which way is Spain. No one in Africa spoke Spanish back then, right?

6) Why they haven't created a TiVo that lets you manage your recording schedule online yet. This seems pretty obvious, doesn't it? I'm constantly somewhere and realize I forgot to TiVo something and there's nothing I can do about it. You should be able to log on to the DVR brand's website and schedule something to record.

7) The subprime mortgage crisis.

8) Why things "burn up in the Earth's atmosphere." Isn't it mad cold up there?

9) Why everyone on the airplane goes to sleep when it's daytime.

10) I don't understand how we breathe in oxygen and breathe out carbon dioxide a half a second later. Doesn't the air just go in and come right out? I know some of it obviously is absorbed into your blood, but doesn't most of the air basically just go in and come right out? What changes? And I don't begin to understand how air in your lung ends up in your bloodstream. And for the med students who are reading this and thinking, "this guy's kind of dumb," why don't you spend less time judging me and more time dissecting your cadaver, or whatever filthy, creepy things med students do.

11) How a laser printer works. I understand the idea of a laser and I understand the idea of putting ink on paper but I don't understand how they're related.

12) How a dishwasher works. I put the detergent in that tiny cabinet and then close the tiny cabinet door. Then I close the dishwasher door and press the button. Then I leave the house since my dishwasher makes as much noise as an airplane taking off. Then I come back later and all the dishes are clean. How does the detergent get out of the little cabinet? How do dishes that are pressed against other dishes get clean? What the hell goes on in there? Further, what the hell goes on in a dry cleaner? How do you clean something well without water? Or maybe I'm dumb and they do use water. But then why is it called "dry" cleaning?

13) How an air conditioner works. It's more than just blowing cold air. It's some incredibly complicated thing that involves water and boiling water and heat removal. I don't begin to understand it.

14) Why some motorcycles are a little loud and some are ridiculously loud. You know those ridiculously loud motorcycles? And you're sitting there at a table outside and it goes by and you're like, "Jesus." Is the guy on it miserable the whole time? Is he like, "I sure wish this thing wasn't so loud."

15) Why there's a disposable camera on the table next to my bed. I noticed it there last month. I haven't bought or used a disposable camera in years, ever since I bought a digital camera. I don't know who put it there or if there's something scary on the pictures. But I'm just going to pretend it's not there.

16) Why the average age of a tenant in my apartment building is about 89. Further, I don't understand why Murray, my nice 90 year old neighbor, always calls me "Josh." Although if you ever need a 20 minute story about life in Russia in the 60's just as you're rushing through the garage to your car because you're late to something, Murray's your man.

17) Where this writer gets the nerve.

18) Why we drink cow's milk. It's the breast milk of a different species. That's filthy. The only people that are supposed to drink cow's milk are little cows. While we're here, let's mention that eggs originally emerge from a chicken's vagina. Kind of upsetting, right? I was in a diner this morning eating an omelette with cheese and it hit me that I was eating stuff that came from a cow's nipple and a chicken's vagina. I realize that eating meat should seem just as bad or worse than this stuff since you're actually eating the animal itself, but for some reason it's not as upsetting to me.

19) How tides work. I understand it's something to do with the moon's gravity, but what the hell does that mean? When astronauts walk on the moon, they're barely affected by the moon's gravity. So how from 250,000 miles away does it pull the whole ocean around like the ocean's its bitch? Is anything else affected by the moon's gravity? If I throw a baseball up in the air, it just comes right down because it's obviously just affected by the Earth's gravity, and not the moon's.

Speaking of the moon, I'm really intent on going there at some point. I just need it to become a commercial thing before I die. I'll shell out any kind of money. I'll blow through my kids' college funds or my retirement fund. I'll sell my liver. I just want to go to the moon. I'm picturing that at some point they'll have a big resort up there, with normal Earth-level oxygen pumped in. So your ship lands and brings you directly into the resort. Everything is normal inside the resort dome except the incredibly fun gravity difference. So they'll have all these fun sports and exercise rooms and other activities that are fun with less gravity. Then they'll have options for you to take a "moon excursion" and you'll train all day with an instructor about how to use your suit and all the emergency hand signals and stuff, and then the instructor will take a group outside the resort for a hike or something. Kind of like going scuba diving. This will happen, I just hope it's before I'm dead.

The Amazon

The best part about the Amazon is that it sounds cool. For two weeks, no matter where I was, everything was a little scarier, a little radder, and a little more intense-- because I was in the Amazon. I'll let the pictures tell most of the stories, but a few general thoughts on Brazil:

-Brazil is pretty great. I liked the food, I liked the people, I liked the culture. Granted, I was only in the north. Part of my affection for Brazil is that I'm still comparing places I go to the 'Stans. Neptune would seem pretty pleasant and easy to get around after a trip to the 'Stans.

-Brazilian women are absurdly attractive. What the hell?

-I thought my English and Spanish would be able to carry me pretty well. Not exactly. English wasn't too helpful, and Spanish was a crapshoot. If you look at written Portuguese, it looks similar to Spanish and you can see that a lot of the words are the same. But the pronunciation is so different in Brazil that even if you're saying a Spanish word that's spelled the same as a Portuguese word, it often doesn't communicate. My Spanish isn't great as it is-- if in Spanish-speaking countries people can understand 60% of what I say and I can understand 30% of what they say, in Brazil it was 15% and 1% respectively. So I reverted to Kyrgyzstan mode and got awesome at charades again.

Charades is a fine way to communicate most of the time. I can do a sweet airplane impression, and the faux hand-washing works beautifully for the bathroom. But there are problems. When I need to know what kind of meat I'm about to eat, I invariably end up making animal sounds, an activity that leaves me with no option other than to loathe myself. The worst is that you can't even say "Moo" for a cow because that's kind of an English translation-- you have to actually moo. And buck, baa, oink, nay, and god knows what else. It sounds potentially fun-- it's not.

Speaking of which, can deaf people just talk to deaf people anywhere, no matter the country? Are there multiple sign languages? Or if people from different cultures have slightly different ways of signing, is that like an accent? Is that attractive like a spoken accent is? Can someone be more articulate than someone else in sign language? Can you have bad grammar? Probably, right? But kind of weird, right?

-Traveling alone is really fun. It sounds solitary, but it's just the opposite. When I travel with friends, we make friends sometimes, but I basically spend the time with the people I'm traveling with (which can be a good thing, depending on the people). But when I'm alone, I really make friends. I spent almost every day of this trip with random humans I had met. Which is cool because they're from all over the world and you end up learning as much about their countries as you do from the country you're visiting.

No matter the country, I tend to meet a lot of people from England, France, Germany, Sweden, Holland, Switzerland, Israel and Australia. I love meeting the occasional person from elsewhere, and it happens, but the vast majority of people I meet everywhere are from those 8 countries. Those are just the people that travel a lot. Of course, it helps that they're all wealthy countries. While we're here, every girl I ever meet from Holland is incredibly cute and lovable. What's the deal with that?

It's always fascinating meeting people from Europe or the US who have moved to the place you're traveling in, permanently. It's just an interesting reminder that you have one life and you can choose to do whatever the hell you want with it. Easy to forget in our world, sometimes.

-It always weirds me out to be in a new country for the first couple hours I'm there, and even more so for a new continent. I had never been in South America before, and it was bizarre seeing it on the map my whole life and suddenly being there. I don't know, I'm weird like that.

-The drivers are, of course, insane. Like most developing countries, there's little or no regard for stoplights, one-way roads, yellow lines, etc.

Speaking of which, here's a traveling pet peeve of mine: I get in a cab, I'm looking out the window at the place I'm in, and the driver has some local music on. It all goes together. Then, 10 seconds into the drive, the driver changes the station to the American pop music station. He sees a foreigner and just assumes he wants to hear his own kind of music. It kills me. Now I'm looking out at Brazil, listening to Celine Dion.

Along those lines, I usually avoid my own iPod during trips and often leave it at home. For whatever reason, I listened to a bunch of music on this trip. At one point I got back into The Beach Boys greatest hits album, Made in the USA-- an old childhood favorite. Absolutely phenomenal. I had forgotten.

Maybe it was because I only brought one book, The World According to Garp, and it was awesome so I got hooked and read it in the first 3 days.

-The cities felt notably dangerous. I'm usually pretty lax walking around anywhere, but I kind of expected to be mugged every time I went outside. I got followed one day for about 30 straight minutes. Bad times.

-A random note, but at least 8 black cats crossed my path during this trip. What the hell?

-Traveling reminds you how far-reaching America is across the world. Even more than the pop culture, the politics shock me. I was on a boat "talking" to an old Brazilian man with not that many teeth who didn't speak English, and I communicated that I was from the States, and he said, "Obama!" and gave a thumbs up. Kind of surprised me.

-On the flight home I was on Virgin Atlantic. Unbelievable. Everything is purple, you can order food from your seat, there are a million movies to select from. I watched Horton Hears a Who. It was wonderful.

Alright, let's get on with it.



The trip was entirely in the north, moving from Belem (all the way at the top) to Manaus in the northwest.



Everywhere. It's their Verizon.



Steak in Brazil is delicious. These stands are everywhere. When you walk out of a bar at 4am you get to eat steak.



Their oranges are green. It tastes like an orange orange.



This fellow hopped next to me while I was sitting at a bus stop. He was kind of the size of a small dog.



Whatever.



This was cool. I went to a little sandbar island called Alter Do Chao. Except it was mostly underwater (high season).



But there were still people chilling there. There were just in the water.





If you walk through the water for awhile, you hit land. There are a lot of Brazilians all around, cooking and drinking and existing happily.




Drunk at 7am on a dock with Brazilian dudes who like to rap. My British friends are on the far ends.



Next I headed out on a boat down the Amazon. I got there first, so I got the best hammock spot. At least that's what I thought at the time. Of course, I'm an idiot and was on the wrong boat.



The right boat. You sleep in hammocks with people to the left, right, above and below you. During the day you chill in the hammock or sip coffee on the edge of the boat and watch the river and the jungle go by. At night you can go up to the roof and drink. No tourists whatsoever. A great time all around.



Views from the boat.





The captain. Despite my desperate attempts to become best friends with him, he kept up his guard and played hard to get. I asked him if I could steer at one point and he said no.



The Amazon River is really effing big.



Sunsets were amazing from the boat. I'm also the best photographer in the history of the world.



Finally we got to a lodge and shacked up there for a couple days. Delightful little monkeys were everywhere. I'm incredibly obsessed with monkeys.





This is Leroy. He was polite.



I went out with a guide in a motorboat and we stopped at this little house.



There was a friendly old woman and her 5 sons and some of their wives and they were peeling manioc roots, which they farm. One of the women was making necklaces from seeds and stems. I bought one, which turned out to be filled with ants. You know it's authentic when it's infested.



A pineapple plant. Apparently the plant grows only one pineapple, which is like a centerpiece. Who knew?



They slice off the tops of pineapples and plant them, and they grow into new pineapple plants. Cool.



On the way out we passed a school boat. Their childhood is different than my childhood.



The guide took me piranha fishing. Basically a bamboo rod with a string and hook attached and a big chunk of steak as bait. They won't hook themselves. They'll eat the meat and then leave. The key is to yank the rod up as you feel a piranha working on the meat and hook it.



That's right.



Fierce little dudes.



Late at night, we went out searching for alligators (caimans to be exact). They grow about 10 feet long. But since the full-grown ones eat people, the key was to find young ones. The guide would shine his flashlight along the shore and search for glowing red eyes. Then we'd paddle over and he'd reach down and quickly grab one and bring it up. Then he'd hand it to me and I'd tremble. Then we'd put it back in the water.

Say what you want about puppies, baby tigers, cubs and little kittens-- nothing is cuter than this little guy above. I think I'm obsessed with reptiles. Besides my obvious affection for tortoises, I'm very fond of iguanas, salamanders, frogs, snakes and, obviously, dinosaurs.



A bigger one. His name was Leonard.



I should open up a gallery. This was taken at 5am, before sunrise.



This put The Circle of Life (from The Lion King) in my head for the next 12 hours.





The next day we headed out on the river to camp in the jungle.





Siciliano, my Brazilian guide and likely BFF. We hiked around the immensely dense jungle and he would machete a path for us. He could do something interesting with almost every single tree, plant or flower we'd pass, whether it could be used to make food, ink, bug repellent, jewelry, cologne, medicine, etc. This guy knew how to live off the jungle. He was also immensely unafraid of bugs. Which was a nice contrast to my paralyzing fear of them.



If you watched Planet Earth, you'll remember how they said the jungle is entirely in the shade because the dense life has blocked all the sun. Then they show a tree falling and they show how it lets in a rare area of bright sun. Within a few years, trees and plants have clawed their way up in a vicious battle for light and the area is dark once again. This is a typical upward view. Pretty dark down on the ground.



We passed a huge fallen tree, and sure enough, a bright area.



Siciliano pulled a little coconut-like thing from a tree and macheted it open and showed me little worms inside. Then he ate one of them and told me it was sweet and nutritious. He offered me one, and after much deliberating, I miserably gulped one down. Bad times.



That big cocoon thing is a massive 10-foot ants nest. Horrifying. It's made entirely of dead leaves, and there are over a million ants inside and on the surface.



A similar ants nest up close. Notice all the little terrifying ants.



I walked into this guy's web. I'm shitting my pants just thinking about this.



Apparently if this guy bites you bad things happen.



In the States we have ants. In the Amazon they have huge horrifying death ants.



A nice community of friendly larvae.



He made ink out of the little red things.



He pulled this stem down and pulled out these strips one by one.



Then he weaved them to make a fan or fire-blower. Almost every roof I saw was made out of these leaves as well.



I'm basically as manly as a man can get.



This is an ant hill. Why does everything have to be so scary?



As soon as it turns dark, 8 trillion mosquitos are all up in your grill. I had 95 pounds of DEET all over me and almost every part of my body was covered with clothing. The only solution was to get ridiculously drunk. Which we did. If you listened, you'd hear a chorus of life all around you. Like the sound of crickets times 40. It was pretty amazing.



I slept in a hammock under a little lean-to. THIS was on the ceiling of the lean-to, 2 inches from my hammock. Wretched times.



Note the monster to the right of my head. The smile is only because I'm 18 drinks deep.



In my hammock, under my mosquito net. I thought I was alone, but apparently I had company, as I woke up with about 60 bites.