2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

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@theopenrogue
#1. CAPE TOWN
Wow. Today marks a week since embarking on this already incredible journey and I'm already loving everything about this place and excited to take advantage of everything it has to offer. I'll try not to make this too long, but that may not be possible so bear with me. I was a little anxious on the days leading up to the 26th partially because I was going crazy walking around my house and starring at the stuff I laid out to pack partially because I was actually wrapping my head around the face that in a few short days I was packing up my life in two suitcases and moving to freaking Africa... If that doesn't make you nervous I don't know what does lol. So finally the day came and I woke up and 5 am still in disbelief that this day had actually come. Saying goodbye to my family was tough, but everyone was supportive and assured me that this was going to be an amazing experience- even Grammy. (After the whole "don't go anywhere alone" speech) so yeah airport was good... Plane ride was smooth until like the 9th hour when I woke up from the turbulence and legit projectile vomited on the FRONT of the bathroom door. Disgusting, I hate myself. To the nice South African stewardess who cleaned it up, THANK YOU. YOU ROCK NEVER CHANGE. Lol omg and then I broke the bathroom door while I frantically tried to get in there... Wow I'm such a liability. Okay so I spent the last 6 or so hours of the flight with my head in my lap or Caitlin's (thank you) and finally got off the plane only to find out that we had like 2 seconds to grab our luggage and sprint to the next gate or else we'd miss our plane. Idk how, but we made it. Wow sorry I've written that much and we aren't even in Cape Town yet ^^^ DAY 1: Okay we arrive in Cape Town, weather is absolutely beautiful. We meet up with our ISA tour guide and take a bus to The Nest. My room is essentially a white box with a tiny window, slightly jail cell esquè, but I knew it definitely had potential. I think the first day we just went to the mall and got some stuff for our rooms.. Fans cuz it's 30 million degrees, hangers, a bunch of other stuff. Don't really remember what we did after that ... Then at night Eleni Diana and I tried to take a cab to meet up with everyone, but we couldn't pronounce the place we were going and got scared so we went back to the nest and tried again HAHA. we ate Mexican food and got pitchers of margheritas that costed all of 8 US dollars. CRAZY. then we went out to this bar called Stones which was cool.. A bunch of pool tables and drinks and people obv. (Drinks were like a dollar) DAY 2: Pretty sure we had orientation super early which sucked... The ISA people are super nice, but sitting in that room was actually torturous. We went to dinner with Jess, our Loyola program director, which was really fun and yummy... Then We went out again at night to some other bars and we all powered through our exhaustion and took tequila shots #bonding. The place was a little ratchet so we all stuck together and sat and talked about random stuff which was nice. Some of us had an intense drunk political convo with a South African guy about their perception of Americans. It's not a good one lol, but hopefully we can prove them wrong. DAY 3: Orientation AGAIN. soooo long. This one was worse than the first because I was exhausted and couldn't sit still and I literally wanted to die. I'm pretty sure I fell asleep in my chair. We went to the beach when it was over tho which was really nice. It's almost too hot here right now to go for the entire day so leaving at like 5 is perfect. Still hot for a couple hours, but then it cools down and the sunset is unreal. We all sat together and talked... Literally we did voluntary icebreakers lol we climbed the rocks and took pictures and none of us could believe how beautiful the landscape was. Everything about this place is beautiful. OKAY OMG. so this was the day I noticed my face... so as I'm looking through beach pics for potential instas in the cab ride home I notice my face is a little swollen on one side.. And then I touch it and it's this huge bump with fluid inside and it's warm and gross.. Right where I had double wisdom teeth. DAY 4: The next day I wake up and my face is HUGE. like gigantic. But I kind of ignored it because we had an excursion. I looked like an idiot tho I'm sure I scared the little African kids in the township. The first thing we did was go to the District 6 museum. We learned all about how black people were forced out of their homes and left with nothing and then the end of apartheid only 22 years ago, when those people and their families went to back to district 6 to try to rebuild their communities. We then got a tour of the Langa township and I was overwhelmed by the sight of poverty that prior, had only existed in movies and tv commercials about donating 25 cents a day to bring water to a really cute kid. Well, it's definitely real. These kids walked around with no shoes, lived in dilapidated shacks and were surrounded by garbage in the streets. Despite how horrible this may seem, the kids seemed happy to just be living their lives, as if they don't even know anything else. The kids loved taking pictures and I took a bunch with them even tho I kind of felt like that asshole white girl posing with adorable little African children. I can't really describe the feeling I had walking through the town. I definitely felt a combination of guilt and appreciation for all that I have. I thought about how many little things I take for granted like shoes and hygiene and cleanliness in general. The next thing we did was a tour of Robben Island, where Nelson Mandela was imprisoned. This was yet another captivating, humbling, and breathtaking experience. We got a tour from a man named Tommy who was a political prisoner for being part of Nelson Mandela's underground political party fighting against apartheid rule. Silence fell upon the group as we heard this man's story. His courage and dedication was inspiring. Someone asked how he didn't crack during the torturous interrogations and he told us that he held his belief that his small part played an important role in overcoming the cruel injustice towards and treatment of black people under apartheid rule. He maintained the belief that a better day would come. After we got back my face was getting worse so I went to a hospital where they told me they couldn't do anything for me... Thanks African healthcare. I got scared at that point and called dentists to get an appointment for the next morning. I tried my best not to be an angry entitled American, but I'm pretty sure it came out and pissed off the nurse and receptionist. DAY 5: I took amoxicillin so my face went down a little, but it still wasn't great so I went to the dentist and he prescribed me stronger antibiotics. He was super nice and helpful which was great and it restored my faith in African healthcare a tiny bit lol. Apparently I have a bone spicule and infection that could've been caused by the air pressure during the flight? Who knows. The doctors office was in a beautiful area called sea point so Gianna and I went to the beach and laid there for probably 20 minute intervals until we couldn't take the heat anymore like an hour an a half later. I think it was over a hundred degrees not kidding. After the beach we went shopping for some stuff and then ate at cocoa wah wah which is like one of the only places well eat all semester apparently. We lucked out skipping the orientation stuff that day because apparently all they did was sleep on the bus for like 2 hours lol. DAY 6: We started UCT orientation... I slept sitting up during the lectures obv. Then we toured campus which is unreal. The buildings look like Italian villas straight out of Romeo and Juliet. Then we did an African Drumming Workshop which was sooo much fun. Then we went grocery shopping cuz the whole not eating ever thing can't go on for much longer. (And not sleeping lol) we checked out Muizenburg (another beach) it was not as nice as Camps Bay, but it was cool. We had dinner and then ubered back and our driver smelled SOOO bad, but it's okay cuz he was blasting Celine Dion and mumbling in Afrikaans. HAhahah Sorry that was so long, but I just wanted to let everyone know that I'm so happy and I'm having an absolutely amazing time here so far. And I have another appointment Wednesday so I'll keep you updated about my mouth and stuff... THANKS FOR READING!!!! Yall are mad lakker (cool) Xoxox Jess
The End
So here we are like 9 months later and I still haven’t put up the last post. I remember trying to write something on the drive home from Chicago, but for some reason I just couldn’t find the right words. I kind of regret not writing this sooner only because I can’t really remember exactly how I felt on that drive home, it’s kind of a blur. It’s like that feeling of adrenaline you get right when you’re about to finish a really long race (not that I run lol) and you don’t even really remember crossing the finish line. The end or the “finish line” to a journey like this one is sort of anticlimactic because for us, every destination was a small finish line, a little baby accomplishment, a reassurance that we could actually reach the goals that we set and have insane amounts of fun doing it.
I think about the road trip really often, whether I glance at a picture on my wall and it sparks memories, or I just reminisce about something that happened or some place that I thought was really cool. It comes up in conversation a lot too. (I’ve yet to need a fun fact for an icebreaker, but driving cross country will definitely be it next time I do.) I stand by the fact that this was probably the one of the best things I’ve ever done and will ever do in my entire lifetime. Basically living out of a car, staying in shitty hotels, and seeing a bunch of places with two of your best friends seriously changes you- not to sound like a coming of age teen movie. The Open Rogue taught me to appreciate every moment of everyday and every person in every place. It opened my eyes to different ways of life and natural wonders that exist in our own backyard, differences that most people go their entire life remaining unaware of. It allowed me to focus on all of the simple pleasures that life has to offer. It was three weeks of simplicity; our biggest worry being getting from point A to point B before dark or a short disagreement about whether we should listen to Taylor Swift’s entire career again or instrumental movie scores.
I guess I’m writing this now because I’m leaving to study abroad in Cape Town, South Africa in less that two weeks and I’m getting that same nervous-excited combination (I think that’s anxious??) that I felt as the departure date of the road trip rapidly approached and suddenly became a daunting reality. As I pack for Cape Town in the same giant green l.l. bean duffle bag I can’t help, but think about the road. Maybe because my green bag smells like the car or maybe because I feel like I’m cheating on the road by going on another adventure lol. But anyway, I look back to remind myself how fulfilling and eye opening traveling is and how it changes you. The people you meet, the places you go, and the experiences you have become a part of the person you become. The memories of your adventures shape you and stick with you and you have a sense of wonder and an ability to be captivated by the little things in life. ITS AWESOME.
So I’ll end now quoting Boyhood... interpret it as you wish, (hahhahah Shae & Kara I bet you’re laughing at me right now) “You know how everyone’s always saying seize the moment? I don’t know, I’m kind of thinking it’s the other way around, you know, like the moment seizes us.”
Mahalo to all of our followers, I wish you well on all of your adventures!
Xo
Jess
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#17. Day 18: Sioux Falls
We woke up in Billings and made our way through part of Montana, Wyoming, and basically all of South Dakota. The drive was pretty uneventful for a few hours until we reached Mount Rushmore in Keystone, South Dakota. This area of South Dakota is home to the black hills, better known as the Badlands where TR spent a good amount of time after his wife and mother died. We stopped at McDonalds for the very first time on the entire trip! Go us!!! After eating we pulled up to the welcome center for the monument and paid for a pass that lets us in to see Mount Rushmore for the next year, so if anyone has travel plans to South Dakota anytime soon, we can save you 11 bucks. Mount Rushmore is really cool, maybe a little smaller than I expected, but that was probably because you can't get that close. The actual sculpting is amazing, the fact that they look exactly like the presidents and that they're so huge and so high up. We took some pictures and walked up to get a closer look. We met a couple who was also on a cross country trip and they lived really close to Big Sur.. Tbt lol. After Mount Rushmore we drove across the farmland of South Dakota to Sioux Falls for like 5 hours. I'm pretty sure I watched My Girl. I BAWLED. It starts McCauley Culkin and Jamie Lee Curtis and I learned so much about life, death, love, marriage, and growing up wow. very very important. Tears streamed down my face I was actually a mess. So if I were you I'd watch it. Okay anyway, we didn't do much in South Dakota because we lost an hour. After getting to the hotel we ordered food and fell asleep. Next stop Chicago! Xo Jess
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