Week 2!

So I’m already finishing my second week! The time is just flying by! I’ve been settled into my new family for almost one week and I love them! They are so sweet and have really made me feel comfortable and do so much to help me. It’s much easier to be away from home with a host family here that I feel like I belong too. Something about them reminds me of my grandparents back at home which is funny but has helped me settle in quick.

This week has been packed with classes and fun activities between them and after them! Today we are headed to D.F for the weekend! I’m very excited but we just go go go so I’m tired! I hope next weekend I’m able to sleep in a little longer because today the bus leaves at 8! I think it’ll be a great experience to see D.F and go to all the museums and see a different city for the weekend and will post pictures on my next post!

The more time I spend here the more I’m starting to understand about the culture and see a different point of view! There are so many things I’ve seen that make total sense now and is helping me appreciate the culture here. šŸ™‚

Time to finish packing! So excited!

mexico mcky ds

I’m half way there!

A very overdue update on week 3, but all week it was crazy to think that after this week I’m already half way through my time here!

On Saturday June 29th the social program took us on a day trip to Stonehenge and Bath! Stonehenge was great and lucky for us we got to visit on a beautiful day! There were lots

of people but we were able to make it through the queue pretty quickly and then we were given free time to make our way around! Next we went to visit Bath which was this gorgeous little town about an hour away from Stonehenge. Here we had lunch, got to visit the Roman Baths and then were given a chance to explore the city. Baths was full of people and things going on, it was a great place to visit. After getting lunch at a little place called la baguette a group of us went to walk around and we came across a market. We got to tour the Roman baths

and at the end you were able to try the water which is suppose to be full of healthy minerals but the water was warm and tasted really gross. After the tour, Chelsea and I went to find ice cream and then walked down to the river where we found a park to relax for awhile. While sitting there, some British guys came up and chatted with us for awhile. It was funny because we were teaching them things about America, and they were from London so we asked them what was something we had to do their before we left from a locals point of view. They called themselves “horrible Londoners” because they didn’t know about any of the things to do there. We ended up teaching them about the Tower of London because we had went there last week so it was a funny to be able to have a conversation with people from here since we don’t get to very often.

Sunday Chelsea and I went to the Sea Life Aquarium in South bank! It’s a close walk away from where we are staying so it was a good day! After we treated ourself to a nice dinner at a nearby Italian restaurant and because it is starting to finally get nice here we were able to sit outside! Lastly, I went with a group of people to an arcade that is also in South Bank where we rode bumper cars, played games, and bowled! There bowling here is a little different then back at home because you play like you do other arcade games in a sense. You have to put a certain amount of pound coins in to play, there are no bowling shoes, and the lanes are a shorter than ours. It was a lot of fun though!

I have approached the last week of my session 1 course, online entertainment management, and overall I have enjoyed it. I created an idea for a mobile application and created a presentation for it, and wrote an academic report on back channeling using microblogging. Ā Although it was a challenge learning the structure for which they do things here I got to look deeper into our social media and why we do the things we do so I look back on it being a positive learning experience.

We end session 1 with a boat party along the Thames river that was put on by the school Thursday night and it was our last time to spend time and say goodbye to those who were only here for session 1. This also happened to be fourth of July for us Americans! So after a group of us went to this diner for milkshakes and it was decorated with american flags and red white and blue balloons with stars on them. I found it interesting how you could find places around London that celebrate fourth of July but it was a cool experience!

 

 

 

 

 

The top left picture are the group of girls that I’ve connected with and the top right picture i most everybody in our big group that live! Obviously this isn’t everybody in the International Summer school program but it’s our little family here that we formed in the beginning because we all live in International house! But Chelsea, the bottom picture, has by far been the girl I have grown closest with over these past 3 weeks and now she is gone because she was only here for session 1. I miss her so much, we had so much in common and made so many great memories together that it was hard to see her leave. Until next time though, she is from Pittsburgh but we plan on meeting up with each other within the next year!

Week 1

Well I have to say that it has been a tough but fun first week! The first few days we were here were a blast! Since us WOU students had two full days together before we went to our host families we were able to explore Queretaro with Carmen and get a feel for the city. It was a little rough at the beginning because everything is in Spanish but it was a great experience that helped get me prepared for my classes here!

Meeting my host family was fun but not what I expected and I really struggled trying to settle in on Sunday. Monday was still challenging for me because I was in a knew place and wasn’t sure if I liked it. Later that night I ended up getting the stomach flu or food poisoning and hardly slept. I ended up calling my wonderful resident director who took me to the doctor at 2 in the morning! I was worn out for the rest of the week and was stressed from missing my second day of class and having to make up work and try to get enough sleep. This week has challenged me a lot but I was able to have some great experiences in there too! We had two birthdays which I was able to attend because I had been feeling better! Also we hiked Bernal which was beautiful! It was a hard hike since it’s the 3rd tallest rock in the world but it was so worth it!

I now feel much better and have switched host families. I guess the dynamics of my first house just didn’t work out, but that is okay. I’m very excited to be with my new family and hope that my next 4 weeks are easier than the first. Only time will tell!bernal

Week #1!

Oh man…I can’t believe it’s already been a week! Kind of feels like we’ve been here so much longer! Meeting my host family was fun! They’re all really nice and super friendly. Very talkative but I don’t mind it! The first day I met my host mom she took me to church and already tried to convert me so that kind of threw me off guard. But we got all that straightened out! i’m already using vocabulary that I just recently learned which is a good sign, right? Hah but I really like it here! I’m used to a lot of things others aren’t because things are almost exactly the same as Kuwait! My seƱora is already ending phone calls with “te quiero mija” (i love you, daughter) which is adorable and makes me want to cry everytime she says it. The food is good! School is actually really fun and we’ve already make a couple friends around campus. We’re definitely not used to the whole guys whistling at us and approaching us and yelling things at us. Every time we think we are, something else happens. It’s been raining the last 2 days which isn’t what we were expecting! It’s supposed to continue for the next week but I hope it doesn’t! But yeah, overall I’m enjoying my time making new friends and learning as much as I can! šŸ™‚

Pre-departure post: Just saying hi!

Hello everyone!

My name is Ann and I will be traveling to Siena, Italy in three days!Ā  I am very excited.Ā  In fact, I’ve been excited for months.Ā  The reason I am going to Italy is for the Sign Language program they offer during the summer.Ā  Once there, I will be learning signed and spoken Italian along with their Deaf culture and history.Ā  I can’t wait!Ā  Although, my Nana has been warning me not to fall for any “cute, dark haired, young men” while I’m there.Ā  Her words not mine.Ā  Don’t worry Nana, I’ll focus on the beautiful landscape and real gelato (ice cream)Ā instead.Ā Gelato towers

Piazza del Campo

My expectations for the culture do not really exist.Ā  I have been to Europe in the past and have learned first-hand that there are many “subcultures” within any town or city.Ā Ā I am simply looking forward to going there andĀ meeting people from a culture different from my own.Ā  I am a bit sad to be missing the Palio di SienaĀ by a few days though.Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā  The Palio di SienaĀ is a large, annual horse race where thousands of peopleĀ crowd into the Piazza del Campo (town square, shown above)Ā and race three laps around a pre-made, dirt track.Ā  It apparently lasts roughly 90 seconds.Ā  Ah, but the energyĀ generated in the crowd of spectators would have been amazing to witness first-hand.Palio di Siena

Over the past few months, while getting everything ready for the trip, I have gone through stages of excitement, nervousness, a bit of trepidation, and back around to excitement again.Ā  This last week has been all excitement, though!Ā  My family have said they cannot wait for me to go so I will stop bouncing off the walls in my eagerness.Ā  Well, in less than 72 hours, my adventure begins. Ā Siena, here I come!Ā  šŸ™‚

 

The Good and the Bad in Glorious Nippon

Iā€™ve been here in Japan for a while now; figure nowā€™s as good a time as any to share some of my favorite things as well as my least favorite things. Iā€™ll mostly ignore things that Iā€™ve already touched on in the past (like expenses). People are people, and I donā€™t really find much terribly different between the US and Japan on an individual basis. Iā€™ll probably be super surprised when I get back home, and find out that Iā€™m actually wrong once I get to compare again, but for now, those are my thoughts. I canā€™t make judgments on the working related side of Japan, but for an exchange student Iā€™d say that the good HEAVILY outweighs the bad.

Rika (2)Even(karaoke, serious business!)

The good:

  1. There are a LOT of good looking women here in Tokyo. I suppose itā€™s to be expected in a big city, as I noticed the same thing in New York City. Itā€™s just especially easy to spot them here due to their fondness of showing off copious amounts of leg. Carrying on a decent conversation is hard, since my Japanese language skills are low, but the ones who are relatively confident in their English skills are super easy and fun to talk to.
  2. Flirting with said women at the pub after several drinks is fun. Itā€™s really the only time that Iā€™m not worried about how good or bad my Japanese language skills are, itā€™s just good fun. If my friend tells me: ā€œIntroduce yourself in Keigo!ā€ (very formal speech) Then chances are that I will. Itā€™s especially fun at my favorite pub which is located in the red light district of Kabuki-Cho. The beers are currently 70yen each, and it goes up by 10yen each month. (1 yen = approximately 1 cent). These are the nights that I use the most Japanese, and no English at all.
  3. Tokyo is lively and fun (until the last trains of the night). There is a lot to see and a pretty good amount of things to do. There are events and festivals nearly every weekend (including Oktoberfestā€¦ There have been two of those so far and itā€™s really not the right time of year)Karaoke
  4. The public transportation is really good the vast majority of the time. Delays are uncommon; the whole system works in harmony and is very effective at getting millions of people to their destination every day. Normal tickets are pretty expensive, but my commuter pass from my dorm to school costs me about $35 a month and thatā€™s a 40 minute commute each way. Plus with my commuter pass I can stop at any station between the dorm and school without paying extra. Outside of Tokyo, itā€™s even more expensive, but the options are pretty nice. You can take a regular train, or a bullet train, or a bus, etc.
  5. The other exchange students are awesome. We have people from all over. A lot from America, a few from Germany, one from Ukraine, one from Poland,Ā  a few from Australia, several from China/Korea/Thailand, etc. Iā€™m most impressed by the ones from non-English speaking countries though. My friend Daniel is from Germany and he speaks German/English/Japanese. For tests in Japanese class he has to translate from Japanese to German and then to English, or the other way around depending on the question. While speaking with the American students he has to converse primarily in English. Weā€™ve actually got him dreaming in English now. ā€˜Murrica! The Asian students impress me a lot as well. A good amount of students on exchange from other Asian countries know at least 3 languages at a very high level (their home countryā€™s language, English, Japanese, and frequently Chinese as well).

Chat2(Japanese chat room event)

Burger(Avocado and Wasabi Burger from Wendys)

Karaoke2(More karaoke, with Akiko and Kat)

The bad:

  1. People walk REALLY slowly! The average walking speed here would never fly in New York City, or any other big city in America that I know of. Iā€™ve been told that this might be because of the humidity. Once you start sweating, itā€™s hard to dry off. Iā€™m rather dubious about this claim, because even standing still the humidity is pretty unbearable.
  2. Relating to the last point: The very second that a single drop of rain falls from the sky, up goes everyoneā€™s umbrellas. This makes navigating through the slow walkers even more tricky. But again, the same reason was explained to me: Once you get wet, good luck getting dry again in the 90% humidity.RainCasa
  3. Relating to the last TWO points: The weather! Summer in Japan means rain, heat, and humidity all together in one lovely little package. I might as well start wearing my swimming trunks to school.
  4. Most of the aforementioned good looking girls are wearing ridiculously high heels. Iā€™m already short enough, and this just makes me appear even shorter. I do enjoy when they wear high heels and yet are still shorter than I am though.
  5. The trains stop running at around 12:30am, which means Iā€™ve pulled a few all-nighters in Tokyo. If theyā€™d even run one or two trains an hour after 1am, it would be an improvement.
  6. Citizenship: Itā€™s quite hard to become a citizen of Japan if you arenā€™t Japanese. Additionally, Japan doesnā€™t allow for dual-citizenship so Iā€™d have to renounce my American citizenship if I moved here permanently. Itā€™s a minor complaint I suppose, but not being able to vote, even if I lived here, bothers me.

The really bad:

  1. Iā€™m getting REALLY sick of seeing this notice at the train station:

Delay

The red part on the bottom left means information from other train lines, and it usually indicates a delay of some sort. That isnā€™t what my problem is. The problem is the exact reason for the delay, which is often: jinshin jiko. A literal translation for jinshin jiko is ā€œhuman accidentā€. In actuality, it usually means someone jumped in front of a train. Iā€™m much less concerned about delays than I am with this needless loss of human life. It gets really disheartening seeing this message so often, frequently daily. Luckily, my train line seems to not be a very ā€œpopularā€ one in this respect, but my friend was on one that had someone jump in front of it. That story had a ā€œhappyā€ ending, as it was a local train already slowing down to stop at the station, so the train was able to stop on time, thankfully. Last year was the first year in over a decade that the number of suicides fell below 30,000. Hopefully itā€™s the beginning of a downward trend.

My Global Business teacher created a video about this subject, itā€™s called ā€œSaving 10,000 ā€“ Winning a War on Suicide in Japanā€ and you can watch it in its entirety here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oo0SHLxc2d0 (Itā€™s in English)

let the adventures begin!

DSC_0262Ā Hello Wales! We started our bus tour at this outdoor Roman amphitheatre which is the only fully excavated amphitheatre in Britain. It was amazing to begin seeing the country side of the UK and to explore throughout this very large ruin. Also at this stop we got to see the Roman Barracks ancient monument and stop at a Roman Legionary Museum. The museum was very interesting and because our group was only able to stay for a short period of time the owner allowed all of us to go into the outside part of the museum where they had people re-enacting what it was like back in the time of the Romans. Our next stop was toĀ Caerphilly Castle, this is considered to be one of the

 

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greatest medieval castlesĀ of Western Europe. This castle had not one but two motes and we got a chance to explore all of inside. We even got to witness the start of wedding occurring there! We stayed the night in Swansea and began day two at the Big Pit Mining Museum. This was an amazing experience, I got a tour of an actual mine 300 hundred feet underground. We put our hard hats on with our head lights attached to them and we were ready to go! Our tour guide was funny too which made the tour that much more enjoyable. I learned how they ventilate fresh air down in the mine, and how they used to have boys as young as six years old working down in the mines. At one part of the tour, our tour guide had us all of our lights off to experience true darkness as the little boys would when their candle got blown out. We got to see where they kept all of the horses and learned the origin of the word S.H.I.T.! It meant sit high in transit when lifting all of the horses manure out of the mine. Near the end our tour guide asked where we were visiting from and we told him London and he said, “London’s a dumb. The best part about London is the M4 on its way to Wales!” Our last stop was to Tintern Abbey which was a gorgeous ruin. We were able to explore around the abbey for awhile and before headed back our tour guide bought us all the best welsh cakes to try which were actually pretty good! I was thrown off by it looking like a pancake but tasting like a scone. Overall I had a great time in Wales, the welsh were very friendly but now it is time to say goodbye and head back to London.

Amongst this trip I have began adventuring around in London with a few friends I’ve made here! We found this amazing street food festival that is near the London eye on the weekends so that is something we look forward to now for their great authentic food! Also, I have began visiting some of the great royal parks here in London. I have been to the

Queen’s Rose garden and part of Kensington Gardens. Kensington Gardens is so big but I was able to see the peter pan statue and the Diana Princess of Wales Memorial which is where we are on the left! I plan to go back there again though to see Kensington Palace.

Other than that I have been doing well and my time here is going by much faster! I have made a list of places I still want to go and I look forward to being able to check some of them off this next week!

Arrival

Ohmygoodness. Arrival was very…interesting. We got to the airport around 8 and they airport wasn’t abnormal…I don’t know why I expected it to be different. We went through security and they chose to check me. We walked around and found the bus station but it didn’t leave until 9:30 I think. The bus was very fancy but I made myself stay up so I would go to bed when we got to the hotel. However, we didn’t get to the hotel until about 2 a.m. Anyways, we definitely went right to bed when we got here and woke up kind of early the next day! Had some delicious breakfast! And we’re off to an adventure! šŸ™‚

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Pre-departure

I have been waiting for this trip for so LONG and now it’s right around the corner! I can’t wait for all the things I’ll get to do and people I’ll get to meet! I’m so excited! I’m also really nervous about switching to the whole Spanish thing 24/7. However, I’ve done it before with Arabic in Kuwait…but I also already know Arabic. Anyways. I think that Arab and Mexican cultures are very similar so I might fit right in, but we’ll see about that. I expect a lot of green everywhere, like grass and trees and bushes. Some flowers too maybe! The food is going to be delicious…I hope…cause I LOVE mexican food!

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Arrival

Wake up call! When we arrived In Mexico City everything switched to Spanish which was expected. It was interesting listening to people speaking and not be sure what they were saying. Going through the airport was quite the experience! I was able to keep up with what they said most of the time so that was good and the people were all really nice.

It’s been a super long day after three flights, a bus ride, and a taxi ride to get to our hotel. I can’t wait to go out and explore the city tomorrow! Tomorrow I will really experience the Mexican culture!! Courtney

Mexico