Tuesday, December 31, 2013

You're gonna hear me roar (here's to 2014)

When Katy Perry's single "Roar" came out several months ago, I honestly was not a fan of the song and actually found it quite annoying.  I still find the song kind of annoying, but the lyrics fit my mentality for 2014.

"I used to bite my tongue and hold my breath
scared to rock the boat and make a mess.
So I sat quietly, agreed politely.
I guess that I forgot I had a choice
I let you push me past the breaking point
I stood for nothing, so I fell for everything."



2013 was basically a year of me being that person described in the song.  I lacked any agency in my decisions and in my life and was forgetting about my own happiness.  A number of events, the main one being what I alluded to in my last post, have provided me with a wake up call and my goal for this new year is to be a stronger individual, focusing on my own goals and dreams and aspirations and just being a good friend, but also staying aware of my own mental and emotional well-being.  I went from being completely numb the first half of the year to being an emotional crying train-wreck the second half of the year and both of those versions of me were terrible.

During these last few weeks at home I've been so surrounded by love and warmth from family and my oldest friends and have realized how much I have to be thankful for, and that because I'm blessed in so many ways, I owe it to the people in my life who have helped me grow to be the best version of myself and be happy and appreciate all the wonderful things in my life, even if sometimes it's wicked hard to be away from Boston and even from Virginia.  I've got a wonderful group of friends in my new home in Nashville though, and so many things coming up to work towards like a brand new semester and the Nashville marathon at the end of April.  This year is about me refocusing my priorities and just being the best version of myself.

So, to 2013 I say good riddance, but I guess thank you for the learning experiences.  And here's to a wonderful 2014!

Monday, December 23, 2013

On Dignity

My Jesuit education at BC taught me the power of empathy, especially when it comes to the human condition and dignity.  I took several courses about human rights for my Faith, Peace, and Justice minor, which focused on the inherent worth of every human being and the undeniable fact that, although we are all different, we are really all the same, and that most humans are after the same things--love, friendship, community, and belonging.  I found all of these during my time at BC, and for that, I can never be more thankful, especially during this holiday season.  A little over a year ago when I was facing a lot of sadness and confusion during my year in Germany, I wrote a blog post about not being "over" BC--and those sentiments are still true.  I've found a wonderful community and group of friends in Nashville and I'm growing to love the city, but my heart still pines for Boston and the general feeling that the BC community gave me every day, a feeling that I never really noticed until I left. 

After I graduated BC, I went right to Germany and many of you know how sad I was over there, so I never really got a chance to put my Jesuit education to the test; to really see if everything I had learned and been introduced to would stick with me outside of BC's beautiful campus.  These last few months though, I have proven to myself that my Jesuit education has absolutely made me a better, stronger, and more empathetic person, truly concerned with the well-being of those close to me, and much less selfish than when I began undergrad, and for that I am thankful.

A large number of my friends know what I was dealing with the last few months, and how the situation of someone I knew was tearing me apart.  I was upset every day, crying more than I ever have in my life (if you're close to me, you know that I rarely cry, except at certain movies and sentimental commercials), wondering about life, questioning my already shaky faith, wondering how on earth bad things could happen to good people, and I turned myself inside out so that I was really only thinking of this other person and how I could act to be supportive and loving and accepting--all things BC taught me how to do.

Since arriving home for the holidays though, I have discovered that I was part of a complete fabrication and was being completely lied to and deceived.  I won't go into details, some of you already know what happened, but this isn't a story to be divulged on my public blog.  Since these recent discoveries, I've gone through a number of different emotions, but none of them has been hate and not really anger either.  My feelings about one person's situation merely switched to another person in the situation, but were never directed towards myself.

It's been a few days now since the truth was revealed, and I'm slowly getting over it, but the feeling I am most overwhelmed with is embarrassment and humiliation, which leads me to the title of this post-- on dignity.  We discussed the concept of dignity to death in so many of my courses, and I understood it, but I understand the concept on such a deeper level after this experience.  Those who have listened to me speak about what happened wonder how I'm not angry or pissed off and aren't understanding why I feel so humiliated, but it all goes back to the idea of human dignity.  Someone made a complete fool of me and a mockery of my life and everything I value and hold dear, and to discover this so far down the road is honestly not just heart-breaking, but humiliating.  It's bad enough to know that someone could lie to such an extent and fabricate such a story, but to realize that someone had such little respect for me that I could be pulled into all of this--opening up my heart and life, not knowing at all that it was a lie.  Someone literally took away my dignity and sense of self-worth, and that is what is the hardest for me to get over right now.  Also realizing that I will never get an apology.  Others in the situation will, but the way it works out makes me the one that has to be stepped on if things are to be fixed on the other side of it all, but it is hard to reconcile that I'll never get full closure in any of this, and that's what makes me question all my views on the world and on human nature,

I'm treating this all as a learning experience--I now know that it's okay to stand up for myself, but I can also look back at all of this and be thankful that my BC education has made me the best version of myself.  Even though I have not been the best version of myself for a couple months now, and have been jeopardizing some of my strongest relationships, I have learned that I am indeed capable of loving very selflessly, and that's an important thing to realize.  Time heals all wounds, and this will soon be something that happened that I look back on without anger or resentment, and hopefully without embarrassment once the time comes.  I will continue to wish the best for people, no matter how they have hurt me in my own life, because seeking to hurt people reflects a lack of love in someone's life.  Ugly stuff happened to me but I don't seek to hurt anyone, and I think that reflects the immense love and support I feel from so many people in my life, and during this holiday season, for that, I can never be thankful enough.

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Der Sommer ist endlich angekommen

"Summer has finally arrived"

This was one of the headlines on the news channels while I was at the gym yesterday-- a headline squished between Obama's visit to Berlin this week and the major flooding that southern Germany is still dealing with, but it was this headline that stuck with me.  I didn't think northwestern Germany was capable of dealing with such high temperatures, but it somehow managed.  Yesterday and today it remained in the high 90s with high humidity.  As stated on my Facebook post, I don't think my body has actually felt such heat in nearly a year, but I loved it.  Yesterday I left for work around 8:30 wearing only a short sleeved shirt and capris-- I don't think I've ever left without a cardigan or jacket.  I went to the gym in around noon and afterwards, my friend Laura suggested going to the Kanal (canal) to sunbathe and swim (I live next the Aasee which is the big lake in the city where many people run, bike, walk, and just hang out, but if you want to swim, you head over to the eastern outskirts of the city to the Kanal, where you can swim--just gotta watch out for the massive transport ferries passing through!)

Laura and I headed down around 3:30 and Katie met up with us a bit later.  When we got there, we quickly stripped to bikinis and laid on our towels, but after about ten minutes the heat and sun were so unbearable that we had no choice but to jump into the water-- the freezing temperature was a welcome relief from the oppressive heat, which was no longer oppressive once we got back out after our swim.  The rest of Münster had the same idea as us and people were packed like sardines along the narrow banks of the Kanal, escaping the heat by frequent dips into the water. 

Every so often we would see a pair or a group of Germans walk up to the bridge that goes over the Kanal, climb onto the railings, and jump off, plunging feet first into the water.  Laura is quite daring and said she wanted to jump and I agreed to try it with her.  We walked up to the top of the bridge, and it actually wasn't that high- maybe ten meters (tall enough for a massive transport vessel to sail under), but we then realized that the hardest part was actually climbing over the railing as to allow yourself to jump off.

I stood as Laura straddled the railing and ended up on the other side, and continued to watch as she jumped down into the water.  She climbed back up and urged me to do it, and I told her I would if she did it again with me.  Despite having bungee jumped twice in my life-- first, off the harbor bridge in Auckland, New Zealand in January 2010, and second, off a gondola over a lake in Interlaken, Switzerland in July 2011 (about 150 meters)...despite these two jumps though, I actually have a pretty big fear of heights.  Both times I bungee jumped, the instructors had to persuade me to jump and I remained at the platform longer than anyone else.  Sometimes when I'm on a high platform or building looking down, I start to feel nauseous and try to think how on earth I managed the courage to bungee jump twice.  For any who have heard my story about that, even if you're not afraid of heights, you're literally putting your faith in another power and accepting the fact that once you jump, you might never experience anything again after that exhilaration-- but to feel something so incredible might be worth it.

Well, ten meters should be nothing, right?  Wrong.

Laura scrambled over the railing again, and I attempted about three times, each time being too scared to hoist myself all the way over, fearing that I would plunge to my death off the bridge, but finally managed to set myself on the other side.  I thought that was the hard part, but with no ledge to stand over, I couldn't figure out the best way to jump.  A German guy came up next to us, and within ten seconds, had climbed over and done an elegant back-flip off the railing, and when we came back up five minutes later, I was still standing on that ledge, as hundreds of bikers and cars had passed me, driving over the bridge.  He climbed over and stood, striking up a conversation with me and Laura, and in my anxiety, I couldn't process speaking German, and then he started speaking English to us.

"Oh!  You speak English!"
"Of course..!"

Ohhhhh, zee Germans and their love of English.

Anyways, he told me we would all jump together, and after counting to three about ten times, he informed me that we really had to jump because the police would come fine us if we stood up there too long-- at this point there was only one way down, as it would be way too humiliating to climb back over the ledge and walk back down to the banks, especially since every German under the bridge had now been staring at me for the last ten minutes-- leave it to the American to create the spectacle, huh?!

Finally, we counted to three and we jumped off (of course the German elegantly carrying out a back-flip again).  I let out a shriek and after an instant of exhilarating free-fall, I landed in the water, smacking my thigh on the surface, and it's still bruised a day later- ouch!  But the point is, I DID IT.  Once I was up there, I knew I would end up jumping, I just needed time (which only makes it worse, I know)



Honestly though, it was the most alive I've felt probably this entire year in Germany .  I sent my mother a picture that Katie had snapped and she chided me for being an idiot, but I don't regret it at all.  Just as I didn't regret bungee jumping either time, and I guess why I continue to test myself in situations that are most fearful for me-- aka, heights.  I'm not saying you have to go get involved in extreme sports or put your life in danger, but to test your limits and to test your fears I think is good for the spirit and the heart and the mind-- it makes you feel alive and makes you remember that you're living and that there is so much to experience in this life.

I've been so numb since I got to Germany, and the endless winter didn't help it, but finally feeling the rays of the sun and the heat seep into my skin and feeling myself free-fall was such an incredible experience after feeling nothing for so long.

Unfortunately, I woke up this morning feeling quite ill-- just a headache and a really sore throat that had started a few days ago.  I figured that perhaps I had been spending a bit too much time at the gym and decided to take it easy again.  I left for school just before 10:00 and was already sweating when I arrived.  This being Germany, there's no AC (absolutely no need for it), so after teaching just once lesson, I was feeling faint and again, sweating like a pig.  Went through one more class and came home and relaxed, and then had to bike a few miles to go do tutoring.  Again, after my arrival and after getting back-- soaked in sweat; it was another day in the 90s.  I relaxed some more in bed, just watching some TV and whatnot, and around 8:30 I started getting a little restless. 

We had just had a massive thunderstorm which thankfully dropped the temperature down to the low 70s, and around 9:15 I decided to go for a bike ride.  Although Germans love going for walks and just chilling in biergartens and out on the grass, they are also always on the move, and I realized that in all my time here, I've never just gone on a leisurely bike ride.  When I was in Heidelberg, we went on quite a few bike rides out away from the city, through the miles and miles of farm fields and discovered little towns spotted around the area,  The weather here is unfortunately not good enough to really do that. 

But since it had cooled down so much, I decided what better time than now.  Hopped on my bike and rode about six miles-- around the whole Promenade and then around the Aasee.  I've biked these areas before and have run the paths maybe 100 times, but I've never just been on them to enjoy them.  The Promenade circles the downtown area of Münster and is about three miles in circumference.  It was beautiful in the fall when the leaves were changing and quite romantically beautiful in winter when the trees were bare and covered in white snow, but now, the trees are in full bloom and so incredibly luscious-- although it was light outside, the paths were quite dark because the foliage is so thick that it's almost like walking through a forest.  It was absolutely beautiful and it was so nice and pleasant to have no destination or nowhere to be, but rather just enjoying the beauty.  I then biked around the Aasee, and the sun was just beginning to set and the water of the lake was so calm that it was eerily beautiful.  Because of the storm just a couple hours ago, there weren't too many people out on the banks and fields, which made it that much prettier. 

Although quite less exhilirating than jumping off a bridge, this ride was also a great feeling.  The slightly humid but cool breeze on my bare shoulders and arms and legs was just so pleasant after the oppressive heat of the last couple days.  Münster really is a beautiful city, and although I haven't really come to love it, I do appreciate being places here.  I've just frequently found it boring.  It's great to raise a family and it's great to study because it's so safe and there are so many restaurants and bars and soooooo much green space, but there's just not a lot to do, and with only a limited friend group this whole year and now most of them gone, it's quite uneventful and dull.  But I guess that's just for me personally, after spending the majority of my life in Washington, DC and Boston-- two major American cities that always have a ton going on, between sports, arts, and nightlife. 

Another reason I was so enthused to take this late bike ride today is because today is June 19th and either tomorrow, the 20th, or the next day, the 21st, is the longest day of the year (it's actually quite a depressing thought, that in the next few days, the days will only be getting shorter...)  Now, I never realized just how much farther north Europe is than America, and if you want to really see the difference, take a look at a world map.  I remember being in such shock when I was in Heidelberg for the summer months that it got dark so late, and I'm even farther north this year, so the difference is even starker. 

It is now 10:50pm and it just now got completely dark.  The sun will begin to rise before 4:00am.  If you haven't spent time this far north during the summer months, it's really something you should do because it's pretty incredible to experience days with just five hours of darkness.  (It is equally just as terrible to experience days with six-seven hours of daylight during the winter months....but hey, it's gotta balance!)  It's so easy to lose track of time and the freedom to do whatever for the majority of the day without worrying about it being dark is pretty amazing.  That'll actually be a big shock going home in a week and a half because down in Virginia, it'll be getting dark around 8pm!

As I was biking though, I was passing groups of Germans hanging out on the grassy areas, either along the Promenade or the Aasee, and passing biergartens and outdoor seating of restaurants hearing the laughter of friends resonating through the cool air, and I realized that it really is time to go.  There is so much about the German culture that I absolutely love and am going to be so sad to leave and it will take a long time for me to get over not having anymore back in America, but I've also realized that as much as I love the German culture, it's just not my culture.  There is still so much, that although I now understand better, I just don't agree with or still drives me crazy, and that's when I realize that I am an American through and through, but just because I'm an American doesn't mean that I need to be isolated from the world and naive and clueless about the world beyond our expansive borders.  I will always factor in my international experiences when figuring out what I want from my life, and will no doubt continue to travel.  I will be sad to leave and it might take a while to deal with reverse culture shock, but at the root of it all, I am sincerely excited to go home again.

Saturday, June 15, 2013

Dirty Little Secret

In two weeks from tomorrow, I'll be back home in Virginia, and I'm feeling a lot of mixed emotions.  Nearly all the assistants in Münster left a couple weeks ago and the Americans in the area are now beginning to trickle out.  We all got together last night at Bradon's in Essen as kind of a farewell bash because it was the last time that we would all be together in a big group.  So, on the one hand I'm actually kind of bored and am just kind of counting down the days until it's time to go home and see my friends and family whom I've missed so much...but on the other hand, I see my kids in class and some of my co-workers with whom I've formed good relationships and we all know that we only have a limited time left, and that's really sad and I'm starting to get emotional about that.  And of course, as I did when I was abroad, I'm starting to make lists of all the things I'm excited about, but also the things I'm really going to miss.  When I returned home from abroad, there was a possibility that I would be returning to Germany really soon, and sure enough I was awarded the Fulbright, and just a year after I returned home, I set off for Germany again.  This time though, I'm returning home to start a two-year Masters program and will most likely begin teaching after that, so Germany is not in my near future at all, and that fact makes it all that more final.

Since we had a late night in Essen last night (I should really say early morning haha) I didn't get out of bed until almost three and I haven't even left the apartment today.  I've just been starting to pack up things, like a big box of winter stuff to mail home, and going through stacks and stacks of papers and brochures I have, deciding what stays and what goes.

In one word- purging.

Oh yes, the infamous purging.  And after thinking about it a bit more, I realized that this whole month is about purging in so many ways.  I've been living in Germany nearly a year now, and I must pack up my life into a few suitcases to move back to America, and that requires lots of purging of papers and clothes and everything that I've amassed throughout all my travels and activities this year.  I'm by no means a hoarder, but I'm definitely not a good purger.  I get very attached to all of my things and find it very hard to get rid of anything- but I'm doing pretty well so far.

This attachment doesn't just stop at material things though, I grow very attached to people and social connections.  Just a little while ago, I went through the contacts on my phone, which had gotten to be over 200, and deleted about 70 numbers of people whom I know I'll never talk to again, and people in Germany whose number I would never ever need again (plus these numbers won't even work when I'm back in the States).  When I graduated from BC last May, I spent a solid hour on Facebook and deleted about 400 "friends" and I've started going through and doing that again-- people I may have met once or people I haven't talked to in years, and that's definitely tough for me.  I'm a very social person and I always like seeing what old acquaintances are up to and there's no denying the way that Facebook helps our social lives-- sometimes I'll post things and people will respond, people whom I didn't even remember I was friends with, and it was something really useful.  I'm trying to look at this purge in a different light, and think of it more as a purging of people I just really don't need to know about anymore.  It sometimes blows my mind, when I meet someone randomly and we exchange numbers and then continue contact for a while via phone or Facebook and then if I never see them again, I just get annoyed.  But twenty years ago--hell, even ten years ago, social media and texting weren't dominant so perhaps you'd meet someone, and okay, that was it!  Seriously. Mind-blowing.

Also, since most of my friends are now gone, I'm using that to my advantage to not spend money so I can at least take a bit of money home at the end of the month and since I've already paid for my gym membership for the month, I figure that what better way to not spend extra money or consume extra calories then spending most of my time at the gym!?  And there's more purging for you- purging excess pounds just in time for bikini season ;)  I actually have grown to really like my gym after the last six months and I'm going to be sad to leave it!  I finally know some of the people there and recognize the other regulars and know who will be there when I go on what days and certain times.  Just like a regular ;)

Seriously, I've already winked too many times in this post.  Please see my last post about winking.  It's becoming a problem.

I'm sure you saw the title of this post though, and thought I was going to reveal some juicy gossip.  Sorry, folks.  I know I'm not one to keep any kind of secret, but even I'm not bold enough to release my "dirty little secrets" into cyberspace.   The song of that name by All-American Rejects came on shuffle earlier while I was puuurging, and I listened to the lyrics and decided that part of this purging is purging such dirty little secrets and getting over things I've done or things that have happened that make me upset with myself or with society or certain people.  I'm starting the next chapter in my life in just a couple months when I move to Nashville to start my Masters at Vandy-- new subject matter, new university, new city, new friends, new region of the country-- so many new things to look forward to, and I don't want to spend any more time lamenting and being emo about things that have or haven't happened in the last year-- so I'm trying to purge myself of those negative thoughts!

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Why I'll Never Be German

Here it is- the home stretch.  We're now into mid-June and I've got 18 days left over here in dear old Germany.  I've lived in this country now for nearly a year and a half (nonconsecutive) and with two and a half weeks left I just now realized why I'll never fit in with the Germans.

You ready?

I can't wink.

Yep.  That's the sole reason why.  Haha kidding.  It's not the sole reason, but it is a pretty big reason.  For those of you who have lived abroad, particularly in Europe, or who communicate frequently with Europeans, you'll notice that they really abuse the emoticons, most notably, the winky face.

;)

See, in American texting and chatting culture, those two characters, the semicolon and the end parentheses are quite daring to send.  You usually send them if you're trying to flirt or be suggestive, or if you're making a joke or implying something suggestive to one of your friends.  I've been told by Germans themselves that this connotation does not exist at all behind the infamous winky face.  It's basically an equivalent for the :) face.  These two are also interchangeable with the tongue face :P

I look at my texting and chatting conversation history with Germans and emoticons are used multiple times in one message.  That's how I knew I had really adapted to the culture- for so long I refused to use these stupid smileys unless they were really deserved, and now I abuse them like the rest of Germans.  When I get home and start texting regularly again with Americans, people are going to think I'm crazy or just forward every single day.




Regardless, the winky face emoticon is easy enough to type... a real wink, though- now that's a different story.  Again, if you wink at someone in America, it's usually seen as some kind of flirtation-- not with Germans.  I don't really see them associating the two together.  Sometimes when I'm at school, I'll see a teacher in the hallway and I give a smile and they give a wink; today, Karim and I were at spinning class and it was a particularly tough class today and we looked at each other and I gave a face of exhaustion and he winked; and then when I was leaving the gym, the gorgeous guy that works at the gym (I should say one of the gorgeous guys because they're all insanely attractive) said to take care and shot me a wink.  Now, here's a time I wish a wink would mean a little more! Hahahahaha.

And this is the sad story of why I will never be German.  I can't wink.  I can't do most normal things that people can do with their faces.  I can't wink with either eye, I can't roll my tongue, and you know, there's my infamous squinty differently sized eyes.  Next to the Germans and their perfect symmetrical faces, well....it would just never work! ;)

(Perfect example of abusing the winky face that I now do right there above...)




 Germans and Europeans... take note of the above GIFs.  Americans have a lot of anxiety over such faces and then you guys go and throw that anxiety in the trash! :P (what could I mean by the tongue face?  I don't even know.)

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Walking On Sunshine....Finally!

Once in what seems like a blue moon these days, I write a happy post- and here it is!

Many of you know that after weeks of phone woes, I FINALLY have a new working phone!  I ordered a used 3GS off Amazon which came about a week later- I rushed to the phone store before it closed and when the guys put the SIM card in it, it said it was unrecognizable and told me to go to the Apple reseller store across the street.  So there I went and the guy tried fiddling with it, looking quite puzzled, until he finally told me there had to be a problem with the phone because it wouldn't even connect to wifi.  Extremely frustrated, I returned home in a sour mood.  Got back on Amazon and requested all the details to return it and calmed myself down and ordered another one.  This one came from within Germany, so only took two days and again, I opened the box, inserted the SIM card that I had already paid for into the phone, so very hopeful.  Well, the phone worked... but when I hooked it up to my iTunes and saw flashing messages before me informing me that the software didn't support basically any apps, I realized I had been a complete idiot and in my fury overlooked the fact that I had ordered a 3G and not 3GS.  Feeling so dumb, I packed it up again and tried yet again- decided to suck it up and just get a used 4 which was quite a bit more expensive, but at least I absolutely knew it would support everything.  During a break at work today I went to the post office and sent off the two phones and hopefully there will be no issues with getting the refunds on them, and I came home to my 4- held my breath and crossed my fingers as I inserted the SIM and connected it to my iTunes and boom! SUCCESS! FINALLY! Everything works, the phone doesn't look like it's ever been used, and I am happy again.  I realize I sound like such a pathetic dud openly admitting on my blog that I became happy because I have a working iPhone again, but it was seriously wicked hard the last nearly three weeks not being able to get in touch with my friends easily, and just get cheered up with snap chats and being able to share my experiences by instagramming and my thoughts by tweeting.  I admit, I'm one of those people that's attached to my phone, but it just really helps me a lot in Germany, when I am so often just hanging out by myself and not constantly surrounded by people as I normally am at home.

Another reason I'm walking on sunshine though is that the sun seems to be here to stay!  While the rest of the country is dealing with the worst floods in recent history, northwestern Germany has had a streak of sunshine and it seems to be here to stay, at least for the week, which is a record if I've seen one in the last ten months!  I opened the weather app for Münster and there is sun predicted EVERY SINGLE DAMN DAY.  I'm serious- I've never seen that.  Even this morning, I got up and left for school around 7:20 and it was gray and cold- I was even wearing my Northface fleece, but when I left school at 2:00 it was 70 degrees with a blue sky.  Rae left this afternoon to go back to England, and while she was packing up her final stuff, I sat out on her balcony just staring at the blue sky, literally in awe and shock and bewilderment at a sky a color that has been so foreign to me.  Luckily, the goodbye with Rae wasn't bad since I'll be seeing her in one month minus one day when she comes to America for two weeks!  After she got on the bus, I headed to the bike shop to pick up my bike- I was trying to pump up the front tire the other day and ended up deflating the whole tire and broke off the little part you need to put air in it... with only three and a half weeks left, I was tempted to just leave it but when I'm getting up for the first lesson at work, those ten extra minutes I can sleep in are worth it, I decided this morning when my alarm went off at 6:50 instead of 7:00.  I needed a whole new front tire, but luckily that only cost 15 Euro and that's the only time I've had to pay for anything regarding the bike since I bought it in September, and now when I ride it, I don't feel like it's going to fall apart underneath me, which is a plus :)

And, yet another happy announcement- NICK IS COMING TO VISIT!!!!!!!!!  He's flying standby so I've no idea when he'll actually be here but I assume it will be sometime on Thursday and we're going to have NSLF Münster and then go up to Hamburg to stay with Paul!  I haven't seen Nick since Commencement Day last year and this will be one of the happiest moments ever.... except when I see how tan he is after living in Hawaii all year and how pale I am after living in Germany all year... damn.  But yes- so unbelievably excited and his visit honestly couldn't have come at a better time.

On another note, I can't believe I'm admitting this, but I created an OKCupid profile.  I actually know quite a few people, both at home and over here that have made one because it's free, so I said, eh, why not?  And actually, the couple Mollie and I stayed with when we went to Paris had met on OKCupid...but maybe they're the exception ;) Ha.  Anyways, my plan was to create it and be able to think about the questions and whatnot and then activate it when I got back home... but I couldn't figure out how to make it private, so that didn't work so I had to literally write on there that I live in Germany.  And what's worse, is that it currently says I'm in Virginia... but I'll only be there for just over one month before I move to Nashville.  So... yeah.  And then I'll be in grad school anyways and I'll be meeting new people anyways.  I just wanted to see what the hype was about- and honestly I don't see it.  I guess that kind of service and outlet is really good for people who have weird jobs and can't meet people easily or just aren't good at meeting people, but I'm really really good at meeting people, so honestly, this whole online thing kind of makes me a little uncomfortable.  I was thinking though that as hard as it's gonna be to adjust back to American life and culture after I've not just gotten used to German culture, but really become a part of it (I saw myself standing practically next to someone in line at the grocery store today, instead of miles behind them as we would do in America and I thought to myself, uh oh... can't do this when I'm back...), anyways I realized that it's going to be kind of cool to go back and meet new people, because I've got this thing to talk about that's just really cool and really different!  Like- I lived in another country for the last year, teaching in a school.  Even when I went and visited Vandy and I met people and they asked the normal questions, I was like "Umm...I live in Germany right now, just popped back over here for a week..." and the reactions I got from that were always full of interest.  So, point is, I'm going to be kind of awkward when I get back since Germans are pretty quirky, but I'll also have this whole closet of amazing and different and notable and even depressing and disheartening experiences to share with new people I meet, and that's already one thing to look forward to about going back- being able to share all of that! (Sorry--the way that the OKCupid thing applies to that last thought is that I didn't really realize that I would be "interesting" when I got back to America until people started messaging me things about Germany and such.)

So that's about it for now.  I'm wicked tired since I got up so early and now it's nearly midnight and THE SUN MUST'VE JUST DRAINED ALL MY ENERGY.  AND I LOVE IT.  :D


Thursday, May 23, 2013

"Waiting for the Sun" (Still...)


When I went up to Hamburg last month for Paul’s birthday, he made guacamole both nights and we feasted on the delicious green mush.  Afterwards, I was inspired to make my own guacamole, especially the weekend of Cinco de Mayo.  Well, lo and behold the German supermarket industry, I couldn’t find avocados in three different grocery stores.  I gave up finally, but was always on the lookout for the green monsters.  I popped into Netto just now because I had absolutely no food and was pretty hungry and there they were- three avocados!  I snatched up two and made my way home.  Cut and peeled one, and decided the second wasn’t yet ripe…well, the first one wasn’t yet ripe either since I could barely mash it even after trying to melt it a bit in the microwave.
So here I am now, sitting in my room nomming on crunchy guacamole and trying to tally the list of fails that have happened in the past week.  (Also, my internet has been blacking out all day so I wasn’t able to look up if unripe avocados are poisonous or anything… so if they are, well that will be the final fail of the week, and I guess of my life. Lol.)
Before last Friday night, things were actually going great- Rae and I had a blast at Frühlingsfest in Stuttgart—we actually ended up at gay night which was the biggest party I’ve ever seen, and then had a nostalgia tour meeting up with Katherine and Sarah in Heidelberg and going to Eckstein.  Rae and I did some quality shopping time in Dortmund on Monday and on Thursday, I headed back to Dortmund to see 77 Bombay Street, a Swiss folk-rock band, in concert with Becca, which was a ton of fun…but after all that, the fails started.
Me and Rae and Stuttgarter Frühlingsfest


Sarah, me, and Katherine reunited in HD!
77 Bombay Street in Dortmund

I guess I’ll rewind back to a week ago- last Friday night when the biggest fail of them all happened.  If you haven’t heard from me personally then you probably don’t know because unlike the first time, I didn’t broadcast it.  After having my second new iPhone 5 for three months, it got stolen once again in Germany.  I wish I were kidding.  Unlike last time though, when I was fairly drunk in Cologne celebrating Karneval and had it out and on the table and someone swiped it when I wasn’t looking, in this scenario, I was basically completely victimized.  A group of us went out to Eule, a small nightclub right in the city center.  I didn’t really want to go out because I had been feeling pretty depressed all week (a combination of PMS and the fact that exactly one year ago I had been celebrating the happiest week of my life with my best friends at BC right before we crossed the threshold to become alumni) plus I had to be up at seven the next morning to catch a train to Lübeck.  Almost all the other assistants in Münster are leaving next week though, because their contracts end this month, whereas the American contract ends at the end of June, so I thought that it would be good to go.  It ended up being a lot of fun- we got to the club and were all dancing and having a good time, except for this German guy that kept following our group around.  He was pretty annoying but we just kept avoiding him.  Anyways, about an hour later, I was standing at the bar with Rae and the stupid guy came back and came right up to me and like ran into me, and about two minutes later I did my “every five minutes Sabrina checks to make sure she has her phone because no way is she going to let it get stolen again” check and of course, it was gone, and then I realized that the guy had bumped my side right where my purse was hanging.  I grabbed Jon and we searched the club but couldn’t find him anywhere.  I went up to security and told them about it, and there was another girl there whose phone had also just been stolen and she was describing the same guy.
So there it is.  Two iPhone 5’s gone in four mounths.  One in Cologne and one in Münster.  But seriously- Münster of all places?!  And this guy was like a German student around our age- definitely not expected at all.  At this point, I almost wish I had just been an idiot and lost it myself so I could at least blame myself and know who to be upset with.  In this case though, it was completely out of my control—okay yes, I could’ve not gone out, but what, am I supposed to just be a recluse and stay in my room until I go back to America so that my things don’t get stolen?  I guess this last year has just been a series of events in which I just feel really helpless.  Events at the very end of the summer left me feeling helpless and confused, and then I had to move to Germany and I remember during my first few weeks here and again, just feeling so helpless and literally like I was stuck here for the next ten months and not even being able to fathom the concept.  When the winter and darkness hit and didn’t end, I again was helpless to the forces of mother nature, and then when my phone got stolen the first time, I felt helpless in the fact that I was now stuck in dark and cold Germany with no contact to anyone back home (yes, I realize I have my computer but the wifi in my apartment is wicked bad and my computer is now five years old and approaching its last days).  Thankfully, I went home for a week in February and was rejuvenated with some energy going into March for travels to Munich, Paris, Berlin, and Montpellier. 
Things started looking up again as spring began to make itself known, but again, I was helpless to my allergies, never knowing when they were going to attack.  And now we reach the latest fail- the weather.  Germany is facing a Siberian Spring, as my favorite pub labeled it in a Facebook post today.  Today the high reached 11 degrees, which is about 52 Fahrenheit, and it’s been pouring rain all day.  The high this weekend is not even supposed to hit above 50, and grey skies have plagued the country for almost two weeks now.  I think the last time I actually saw more than a tiny sliver of blue sky was two weeks ago when I was in Heidelberg.  The grey skies here though, are unlike grey skies I’ve ever seen before, although nine months here, they really have become my norm.  Usually, it’s grey for maybe a day, or if there are clouds, they’re covering up a blue sky whereas here, the sky is blanketed in grey to the point where you can’t even see clouds, and when there are clouds, they are hard to distinguish because they are grey clouds covering up a grey sky.
So once again, I feel myself helpless to the forces of the weather.  I find myself not wanting to do anything but sleep or just sit on my computer finding warmth underneath my covers.  Going to school for just one lesson today seemed like the hardest thing in the world and I didn’t even feel better after I went to the gym.
I mentioned that on Saturday morning I had to catch a train to Lübeck- Becca and I went up to northern Germany for two nights and stayed with Corbin, another Fulbrighter.  I think that visit was exactly what I needed- it was hard traveling without my phone, but I had Becca and Corbin—we explored the beautiful city of Lübeck, ate marzipan, helped Corbin with cooking amazing meals, and had really great conversation which again got me wicked excited to start grad school in August and to be academically stimulated and challenged after a year a complete dearth of such things. 
Lübeck is a city with a feel similar to Münster and Heidelberg, but it’s the “Hansa Stadt” meaning that up until the 20th century, it was an independent city, retaining much power because of its access to the sea.  During WWII, the city only got bombed once, as a test actually, so nearly the entirety of the city is centuries and centuries old, and as we walked along the narrow streets, I really felt like I was in the Europe that people think of when they think of France and Spain and Italy—a Europe that you don’t get a lot in Germany because so much of the country has been rebuilt. 
The famous Lübeck gate

Most famous marzipan in the world!

Corbin and Becca- exploring Gänge

Viking village...or the Shire??
 On Monday, Becca and I headed to Kiel, but stopped in Plön on the way, a small city next to huge lake.  It was fairly warm that day, but completely foggy and grey, so it was actually difficult to differentiate between the lake and the sky—a cool effect, I guess?  We then arrived in Kiel, and despite being on the coast in Schleswig-Holstein, we ate at a traditional Bavarian restaurant.  Our train wasn’t until 6:30pm the next day (Monday and Tuesday were religious holidays in our state) so we had planned to take a one hour boat ride through the Kiel canal up to the beach of the Ostsee (Baltic Sea), but yet again another fail- we awoke to grey skies and pouring rain which only got worse as the day went on.  Unfortauntely, 95% of Kiel was destroyed in the war, so there is actually nothing to do or see there (even Germans will admit to this fact), but Kiel’s attraction for tourists is its access to the Ostsee, but we couldn’t do that.  So Becca and I had to spend the day finding ways to bide our time and stay out of the rain.  We did get a nice lunch at the Kieler Brauerei, which was quite nice, and I bought a shirt at the mall that says “WAITING FOR THE SUN.”  I had seen it on a mannequin on Sunday in Lübeck and decided I had to have it because it basically defines this year for me.  Maybe if the back said something like, “AND LOOKING FOR MY PHONES.” 

Plön

Kieler Hafen

This is a "lunch" in Germany
Overall though, I liked northern Germany more than I expected, but I think that’s because it wasn’t the winter, when the sun shines there for maybe six hours a day.  I do wish it hadn’t have rained though or we had at least seen a tiny bit of sun so I could’ve put my toes in the sand and in the Ostsee just once.  It looks like there’s no reprieve from this cold streak until the end of next week, but I’m really trying not to let it get me down, it’s hard though.  I ordered a used iPhone 3GS off of Amazon and it was shipped yesterday so I’m hoping it gets here before Sunday, and then I’ve got to hash out even more money to set up a new number for the third time, and then I can once again be connected to everyone.  As I said, unlike the first time this happened and I was just completely depressed and literally counting down the hours until I got on the plane back to Washington, I’m less depressed this time and just more annoyed and exhausted and that key word again, feeling helpless. 

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

A Maturing Sense of Time

I realized something when I was on the train home from Mainz yesterday, and it's something that I believe is happening to all recent college graduates, but something even intensified by living abroad--and that's a changing sense of time.  In college, everything was fast-paced and everyone was always busy and had a million things to do, but by the time senior year rolled around, I saw all of my friends basically at least once a day, whether it was in class, in my room, in their room, in the library, in the Rat, at band rehearsal, at work, or heading out to the Mods, MAs, or downtown.  If I didn't see one of my close friends for two or three days, it was a big deal.  It was something to be talked about.  It was a point of worry, sometimes even contention.

Boy, have things changed.  My closest friends that are also in Europe- if I see them once every few months, that's a big deal.  I've visited Paul in Hamburg three times now, and have visited Katherine four times and she's visited me once and then we saw each other at the Berlin conference, and Mollie and I saw each other for a total of two and a half weeks in March.  These are considered major accomplishments.  Now yes, I realize the distance thing is the main factor holding back more frequent visits-- but this is why I refer to a maturing sense of time.  Because we come to cherish these infrequent visits for all that they're worth because we can no longer take for granted that we'll all see each other in our apartments, at work, at rehearsal, walking across the quad, and no longer are our friends a walk across campus.

Besides friends that are cities and countries away, I've got a number of other assistant friends in my own city of Münster, and seeing them once every couple weeks is perfectly sufficient.  There may be a greeting of, "Oh wow, I haven't seen you in weeks!"  But unlike in college, this was never a point about which to quarrel or dwell on, rather just a simple fact of life.  I remember when I was younger and always thinking it so strange that my mom only saw her supposedly "good friends" every few weeks or so, or how she could have so many friends that she only saw a couple times per year.  When I went away to college almost five years ago, obviously I lost a lot of high school friends because we just stopped keeping in touch, but those with whom I stayed close, I only see them a few times a year (and this year even less), but that doesn't make them any less close to me.  I guess this is all part of growing up and as I said, maturing

Anyways, food for thought.

So, for those who don't know- I went to Heidelberg this past weekend to run the half marathon!  I ran with Katherine and two other ETAs who live near her, Selma and Heidi.  Needless to say, Katherine and I were not at all looking forward to this race.  We had been training quite a bit...until we had three straight weeks of vacation and traveling one month before the race.  I was supposed to run a half at the end of February but had to cancel that because I ended up going home that week.  Before that, I was up to eleven miles in training, but once I got back, it was MSM and non-stop traveling, so I never got back up past eight miles.  Fortunately, thirteen miles wasn't something too daunting, since technically with marathon training last year, I had already run at least five half marathons, but not more than eleven miles in the last year.

Anywaysssss, arrived in Mainz on Friday and Katherine and I ended up getting a bit drunk by accident on Friday night and woke up very hungover on Saturday- it was raining all weekend and we were exhausted by the time we got to Heidelberg on Saturday evening.  We crashed at our friend Eric's place and I kept waking myself up when I turned over on the air mattress and kept hoping that the race was done with, but it wasn't--and when we awoke at 7am by my alarm, I was actually dreading it.  I had only brought shorts and it was wicked cold.

Made our way to Uni Platz, fortunately it wasn't raining.  Found Selma and Heidi, did a bit of stretching, grabbed our numbers, and headed to the start line.  Started at a nice pace, and the weather actually ended up being PERFECT for a race-- just about 50 degrees and overcast.  I won't bore you all with race details, but the race was HILLY! Like WOW!  But it ran through the Altstadt and then through Neuenheim and then up the Philosophenweg and headed through the hills across the river into Schlierbach and then up to the castle and finally back down, ending back at Uni Platz.  The trail running was quite peaceful, but Heidelberg and its surroundings are so beautiful that it was hard not to stop and just bask in the scenery.  The hills were wicked tough, but we all finished!  I nearly didn't, because about 300meters from the finish line after 2km of downhill running, back onto the cobblestone of Hauptstrasse, I completely wiped out and literally rolled over, but I had fallen on my knee and had to run/limp to the finish line.  If it had happened any earlier in the race, I might not have been able to make it to the end. 

About halfway through- you can see the Alte Brücke way in the distance

"Free Beer for Runners"...this was around mile 9 or 10. Only in Germany.

#BostonStrong..and showing off my lovely wounded knee

Fulbrighters conquer the hills of Heidelberg!

As I said...the hills were no joke.


But the race itself was great-- after so much dread, it ended up being a great experience!  I ran Boston over a year ago now and I've since forgotten how exciting race day is and the whole atmosphere and how fun it is to be surrounded by thousands of other crazy people like yourself whose idea of fun is putting their body into a ton of pain!  It got my so psyched to continue racing and to now work on improving my times--hopefully get another half in this summer and then maybe the BAA Half in October and definitely the Country Music Marathon in Nashville next April!

Speaking of Nashville... it's official, I've decided I'll be going to Vanderbilt in the Fall.  A couple months ago, after Berlin, I wrote about perhaps wanting to stay, and that was more than just a fleeting idea-- I actually started applying to three programs, emailing the coordinators, securing my transcripts and diplomas from BC, writing essays, but in the last few days, my mind has moved back the other way and I just feel in my gut that this is the right move for me. 

My life abroad and in Germany is just way too unstable and volatile and lacks structure.  I know that by doing a Masters Program, I'd have much more structure than I do now or did when I was abroad, but in general, I can't continue this emotional roller coaster for another two years.  There are some crazy highs but the there are also some devastating lows.  I know for a fact that I can be happy at Vandy and in Nashville and that I want to teach, but there's too great a risk that I won't be happy if I stay in Germany, and looking back at how depressed I was this past winter, I just can't knowingly and voluntarily place myself in such a situation.  I know myself, and I don't like change and I do like structure and being busy and knowing how to function in a society by expressing myself, and after this crazily un-busy year, I want next year to be busy with learning and teaching and training for more races and watching TV online legally! (lol.)

So yes, I'm moving to Nashville in just a few months- southern Sabrina is becoming a reality after all these years!  I love Germany, and I love so much certain aspects of my life here--the independence, the bread, the bakeries, the lifestyle (sometimes), the attractiveness of the population (yeah, I said it), but I think more than my fondness for all of that is my fondness of the things that I miss in America.  Although I will say that I'm in a more stable state than I was several months ago when I was hating Germany and everything about it and the people and the culture and Europe in general.  And I'm in a better state than I was a few weeks ago when I started having anxiety about starting my degree at Vandy.  I've got an incredible two years ahead of me, that like my Fulbright, will open so many doors for me, and that's not something I should be afraid of, but rather, be excited about.  I've now got exactly two months left, and I'll make the most of them, and Germany and I will absolutely be leaving on good terms.  It won't be a messy breakup but I won't be getting dumped; rather, it will be a mutual parting, and we will always remain friends, saying Auf Wiedersehen with the hope of many more visits planted in our futures.

(But let's get real...we know I'm reaaaallly only returning for gastronomical reasons)

Sam Adams Seasonal

...and Mexican food

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Love that dirty water, oh Boston you're my home

I awoke yesterday morning quite late because I didn't have to work...just before 11.  That meant it was 5am back in Boston- I thought to myself how on this same Monday last year, I was waking up full of nerves, putting on my Campus School Marathon jersey, preparing some snacks, and heading down the hill from Gabelli to meet Steph outside of Conte, and then heading to the Campus School to meet the other 100+ runners, so we could hop on a school bus and drive the 21 miles to Hopkinton, to run the Boston Marathon. It was an experience I will never ever forget, although some of my memories from the day are now a bit hazy because of all that excitement and exhaustion that came with the event.

I awoke yesterday morning a lot more emotional than I had expected.  I knew it was Marathon Monday, and I was excited for all the runners and everyone at BC ready to drink and party and cheer on at Mile 21, but as the day went on, I more and more longed to be back in my city.  I couldn't get a live stream of the race when the elites were running, so I had to rely on following the updates via Twitter, rapidly texting my mom about the Kenyans and Ethiopians who always win, and the Americans who were fighting for a medal.  My Facebook feed blew up as the afternoon carried on, as the partying in the mods began, as people started posting their pictures of their friends, of the runners, of the race, everywhere from Newton to Brookline to downtown Copley.  I was even feeling a pang of jealousy that the runners this year got to experience pleasant and ideal running conditions, whereas last year, we faced 85-90 degree temperatures and a scorching sun for a 26.2 mile run.

Those pangs of jealously quickly disappeared though when sometime in the evening I saw the first Twitter notification about bombs going off at the finish line.  Rae was over and we were watching "The Voice"...I made a comment about what I had just read, but didn't realize how serious the blasts had been.  For the next hour, I witnessed Twitter, Facebook, and the news sites blow up with news of the two bombings and those injured.  I eventually found a live stream of the finish line, and was in tears when I saw the deserted and barren finish line-- the Marathon had been stopped, the runners had been rerouted, and the finish line area at Copley Plaza had been evacuated.

I was no longer jealous of runners and of the people at BC, but instead, so completely sad and hurt for them, for everyone in the city, for everyone who had trained for months and months and months, in some cases even years to qualify for Boston, for friends and families who had traveled long distances to specate, and for this city that I love so incredibly much.  If you know anyone who's lived in Boston for at least a few years, they'll tell you that Patriots Day, more commonly known as Marathon Monday, is the biggest day of the year- it's a point of pride and celebration for Boston and Massachussetts, because it's the only place in the country that has this holiday.  The Boston Marathon is arguably the most famous in the country, if not the world, and is one of the most strenuous courses with all its inclines and declines, but it's a course for which every serious runner strives, and part of that is due to the absolutely amazing crowds that turn out to watch throughout the entire course.  I still remember hitting the halfway point last year running by Wellesley College and bursting into tears because the girls screaming for us and cheering for us were just so amazing.  When I hit BC at Mile 21, my friends found me and hopped past the tape and ran with me for nearly half a mile, filming, taking photos, and screaming at me to keep going- I was so overwhelmed with happiness that I can't even remember the moment clearly.

This is what the Boston Marathon is for so many people.  A culmination of blood, sweat, and tears.  Nearly four months of sacrificing a lot of fun times in order to wake up early to run in the freezing cold and ice and snow that make up Boston winters- all for a three or four or five hours run (or two if you're an elite) leading you to the center of the greatest city in the world.

I just can't even begin to fathom how the runners this year are feeling.  I keep trying to think back to how I would be feeling if this had happened last year- my mom and Steph's family were waiting for us at the finish line- I crossed that finish line... These runners must feel relief and are thanking God that they're safe, but then these feelings must be mixed with anxiety and fear and anger.  Unless you've trained for a marathon and suffered through that 26.2, it's hard to understand the mentality behind the marathon.  So many say that a full marathon is more mental than it is physical, and for recreational runners like myself, it's completely true.  If you put in the training, your body can do it-- I learned that during training last year--your body can literally do anything.  It's the mental part that is the hardest.  Forcing yourself to continue when you're in pain and bored and frustrated.  I would just be so incredibly angry if this had happened during my first marathon.

Mike Wise writes for the Post and has ran four marathons himself and was able to more articulately capture such feelings: "For so many who ran, Boston on Monday afternoon was less about a race and more about a platform for so many courageous people to prove to themselves that life does go on, that closure is possible. And to violently intrude on that kind of healing, that perseverance — to layer on tragedy and grief and heartbreak on the day so many watching and running were trying to move past it — is so wrong and personally destructive it’s almost unspeakable. No other major sporting event in the world can the novice line up next to the elite and try to spiritually climb their own Mount Everest. They all have a story of how they used their legs and their heart to conquer, overcome and get to a place of serenity or competitive satisfaction that finishing the oldest and greatest of marathons was supposed to bring them. To hear, “The race is over. There is no alternate finish,” announced at about 4:06 p.m., hurt so much deeper than pain of running 26.2 miles ever could"

(full article here)


What happened yesterday was just absolutely disgusting.  Unfortunately, I'm still so shaken up over it, am still tearing up every few hours when I think about it, that I'm just not able to articulate my thoughts as well as I usually am.  There are however, many articles and statuses and tweets surfacing that capture my sentiments and the sentiments of a, to put it in Obama's words, strong and resilient city.  There's a reason that Boston is known for a rougher crowd and movies like The Departed and The Town.  I just came across this Facebook status and this guy is completely right:

"There are few places in the world that people are prouder to be from than Boston. When you look at how this city, this small town, has handled tragedy you can understand why.... The Boston Marathon is a pure event. It ranks with the Super Bowl, the Olympics, and the Tour de France as one of the most prestigious and renowned sporting events in the world. But unlike the other events it isn’t exclusive. Anyone can enter. Your neighbor, your co-worker, your best friend, your son, your daughter, your significant other. For one day every April, with dedication and hard work, an amateur athlete can ascend to the elite world stage. For one day every April, from Hopkinton to Boston - friends, family and strangers proudly cheer on amateurs with the same passion as any Red Sox player in the bottom of the 9th. It’s magical. It’s perfect...This town has been changed forever today...A year from now the windows in Marathon Sports will have been replaced, but for 26.2 miles, an unprecedented fear will remain. The toll of the day is still unknown, and it is still unclear where to direct our collective anger. I know this town. And I know that in the days to come with the stories of horrific pain, there will also be stories of tremendous bravery. To whoever is responsible, it’s not a good place to have the entire city of Boston looking for you. We have a wicked long memory and are very protective of our own."

What this guy said about the event is spot on.  A marathon is such a collective event.  500,000 spectators line the streets to cheer on 26,000 runners.  For one day, it doesn't matter who you are, you are connected with all of your neighbors.  As a spectator, it's impossible not to be inspired by the runners, and as a runner, it's impossible not to be thankful of the spectators.  A professor at BC wrote a letter to the editor yesterday putting this into perfect words: 

"One of the most common ways terrorist attacks backfire is when the communities they aim to frighten respond not with fear or infighting, but rather with resilience and resolve to strengthen their social bonds beyond what they were before the attack. The blood, sweat, and tears put in by tens of thousands of runners, volunteers, and first responders.  The hundreds of thousands lining up to cheer themselves hoarse for people they don't even know regardless of their ethnicity, religion, or political party."

(full article here) 

And Ezra Klein wrote about the events yesterday as well saying, "The finish line at a marathon is a small marvel of fellowship.  Everyone is there to celebrate how much stronger the runners are than they ever thought they could be.  Total strangers line up alongside the route to yell encouragement.  Bands play.  Some hand out cups of water, Gatorade, even beer.  Others dress up in costume to make the runners smile.  The fact that other people can run this far makes us believe we can run that far.  It's a happy thought.  It makes us all feel a little bit stronger."

And as Kathrine Switzer, the first female runner of the Boston Marathon, said, "If you are losing faith in human nature, go out and watch a marathon."

Klein goes on... "If you are losing faith in human nature today, watch what happens in the aftermath of the attack on the Boston Marathon...This won't be the last time we gather at the finish line to marvel how much more we can take than anyone ever thought possible."

(full article here)

 
Marathon Monday will still be the best day of the year in Boston.  It will still be inspiring and a celebratory day, but it's true- the day has now been forever tainted by these disgusting and inhumane actions.  What was once one of the last remaining pure events will now be an event marked by and remembered, not for the overcoming of obstacles and the accomplishments of the body and spirit, but by tragedy and violence, and even if people try to put this aside, the heightened security measures that will inevitably happen from here on out for this event will absolutely taint what should be a simplistic and pure feat of the human body and spirit.

This is already a week in America marked by tragedy- the Oklahoma City bombings that occurred April 19, 1995 and the Virginia Tech Massacre which happened April 16, 2007...and now the Boston Marathon bombings on April 15, 2013 will be added to that list.  I'm from Virginia and was in high school in Virginia on the day of the Tech shooting, so many people near and dear to me as well as myself are remembering that day today.  Last year, after a two month search led to a tragic ending, my friend Franco Garcia's funeral was on April 18, so I will be remembering that as well on Thursday.  It's a tough week, but with these tragic events I have witnessed amazing humanity and community and strangers coming together in love and friendship and support.  The Boston marathon route runs right through BC's campus at mile 21, and I know that along with all Bostonians, the BC community feels a personal connection to everything that has happened and the love and support outpouring already is incredible.  

When I woke up yesterday morning, I was sad and unhappy that I wasn't in Boston.  By the time evening hit and I heard the news, I was upset and felt helpless that I couldn't be in the city where my heart lies after this terrible incident.  If this was a terrorist action and was meant to instill fear in people, especially runners, I think it had the opposite effect and will inspire even more people to run marathons and even more runners to continue running marathons.  Finishing Boston last April was the most fulfilling feat I've ever accomplished and I've been telling myself that I want to train to do my second marathon next Spring.  After yesterday's events, I am in no way dissuaded, but am determined more than ever before.
  

Celebrating reaching Mile 22 last year, right next to the Res, long after my name had sweated off my jersey
0.2 miles away from the finish line on April 16, 2012
The finish line on April 15, 2013

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

At least we had clean underwear!

The final installment of MSM happened when I went down to Montpellier (on the southern coast...not bad, eh?) to spend the week with Mollie during my spring break.  Getting down there was kind of a nightmare actually... in order to get the cheap RyanAir flight, I had to leave Berlin on Thursday morning (I was sad not to get to spend the weekend there with some of my good friends) and then got back to Münster for about six hours, which gave me just enough time to hit the gym, grab some snacks from the grocery store, and repack my bag for my trip!  Left my apartment around 9:45pm to catch the bus to the train station, my train left at 10pm, and got into Cologne around 12:30am.  Then I had to wait until 2:15am for the shuttle bus to take me to Hahn airport. If this were the summer it would not have been so bad, but even at the end of March, it was still 25 degrees in Germany and the hardest part of my journey was honestly staying sane while I was freezing in the Cologne station.  I'm just so sick of the cold.  SO SICK.  It has seeped into my veins and I think sitting in the steam room at the gym a couple times a week is the only thing stopping my skin from cracking off.  I know I complained a lot last summer about how hot and humid it got and the fact that our house on Foster Street had no AC and for days at a time we were melting and went to bars just to get a reprieve, but this is so much worse.  I've always hated the cold more anyways.  I just hate wearing pants!!

Haha okay, but to continue.  Somehow made it through those couple hours, boarded an equally freezing bus and drifted in and out of slumber during the three hour drive and finally arrived at Hahn Airport around 5am.  Of course it was snowing.  Ran from the bus to the airport, checked in, ate a bit, and finally boarded the again equally freezing plane.  Curled up in a window sleep and woke up as we were landing.  Deplaned and when I stepped outside it was the most amazing feeling to step into fresh air and not feel instantly cold!  It was actually quite cool and grey in Montpellier that whole Friday but I did not mind at all, and that's what I kept telling Mollie when she kept getting upset that the weather for my week down there wasn't amazing.  Anything was better than this year's winter in Germany.

Hopped on the shuttle to downtown where Mollie picked me up at the stop and we went to her apartment.  She had come down with a bug the day before so had taken the day off work and was resting all day so she'd be better for the weekend, and since I was equally exhausted and it wasn't even yet 9, we both just passed out and slept til mid-afternoon.  Got some noms...which in France is of course bread and cheese and carrots and more bread and cheese and pain au chocolats yummmm.

Since we were so tired, we didn't do anything on Friday during the day, but being 22- of course we had to do something at night!  First we went to a party at another one of the assistant's places, Jenelle, who's French roommate was celebrating her birthday.  We got there right when it started and there was only me, Mollie, Sarah, and Jenelle, and then Melanie and her friends who were all French.  The groups were a little segregated, and I felt bad about that but I really did try with my French all week!  So I spoke a little with the French people but the most interesting thing about my week down there was the stark difference between French and Germans.  I can speak German but I rarely speak it because Germans are all basically perfect at English and always want to practice.  French are basically the opposite.  Their English is usually not as good and even when they are pretty good at English, they usually don't want to practice it- so basically no French people I met would speak English to me.  It was on the one hand refreshing, but on the other hand kind of ostracizing because there was so much of the conversations I couldn't participate in.  Germany and France need to find a happy medium!

After that party we headed to another party at Flo's, who's on Mollie's frisbee team.  This party was just a bunch of guys from her team and then me, Mollie, and Jilli.  Sometime around midnight we headed out to a club called Cargo which kind of reminded me of an American club because it played American Top 40 and had American style dancing.  Again- another big difference between Germany and France.  It's so crazy that these are neighboring countries, but I was just picking out soooo many differences!

Noms

We were out pretty late so ended up sleeping til about noon.  It was another rainy day so after some food, Mollie and I headed to Odysseum, the big shopping plaza in town and hit up H&M and then bought lots of groceries to make quiche for dinner!  (And of course bread and cheese)  That night we headed to another French party- it was the birthday of the boyfriend of one of the assistants.  It was in a pretty small apartment and again, there was kind of a segregation between the French and the English speakers.  I was disappointed that the French weren't more friendly.   I know that that's the stereotype, but I've had nothing but positive experiences in France...when I spoke no French, and this time around, I was so excited that I actually knew some French and I could have some conversations with people, but no one really wanted to try with me.  I could actually understand quite a bit of what everyone was saying though, just couldn't really respond!

Might be the only pic of me in Montpellier

It was pouring rain on Saturday night but luckily the club was right across the street.  By night two, I was really missing beer though.  We had drank wine and vodka at the parties and the clubs, and beer is ridiculously expensive in France- but that's just what I'm used to drinking normally.  It was another late night and we slept pretty late again, but spent Sunday exploring Montpellier.  It was quite a grey day, but the city was still gorgeous.  Walked around the narrow streets, passing churches and cafes with baguettes in our hands.  I was so surprised to see palm trees and cyprus trees- but then again, that's the climate of the south!

Love those panoramas

Monday brought about the sunshine and warmth I had been waiting for.  We got up bright and early and joined Yumi and Elith to head to the beach!  We went to one that was a little farther away, but it was absolutely GORGEOUS.  We only stayed for a few hours, but the sun was glorious and it's been so long since I've seem the ocean!  We got lots of food and picnicked on the beach, played some frisbee, and sat and had some coffee at a cafe.  Not even kidding, I had chronic headaches all week and I'm pretty sure it was due to the sunshine.  The light was so foreign to my eyes, that a few straight days of it was painful.  You guys all think I'm being dramatic- but I can't tell you how drastic my mood changes have been since the sun has finally made itself familiar.

Beach town
Hello, Mediterranean

We got back mid-afternoon and it was about 65 degrees so I made Mollie come on a run with me, and I was just so not used to running outside in warm temperatures!  Afterwards, we cooked some dinner and then headed to a bar and sat outside to share some wine with Jilli and Chris and just talk about European life and American life and our futures and whatnot.

On Tuesday, I got up and ran with Sarah, who's currently training for a marathon next month.  After some lunch, I went to school with Mollie.  She works in a primary school, so we visited a 3rd, 4th, and 5th grade class I believe.  French teachers are much stricter with their kids, and I was also surprised to see that the teachers barely speak English.  Mollie was saying that she thinks that's why French people aren't good at English generally, because their teachers aren't good at English.  Which is the opposite in German schools--all the English teachers at my school speak perfect English and even the teachers of other subjects all speak English about as well as I speak German!

We stopped home quickly and then headed to frisbee practice.  I've never played ultimate, so what better time to try than in France!  I had already met some of Mollie's teammates at the gathering on Friday, and I met some more.  It was fun to join the practice of a team sport!  I honestly don't remember the last time I participated in a team sport, because all through college I only focused on working out and running- so it was pretty fun!  And I'm not so scared of the frisbee anymore which is a plus! 

Another note- most everyone knows about the French kissing cheeks greeting, called bizou.  Well, in southern France, you had to kiss THREE times.  To everyone!  No matter where you see them!  I could understand bizouing at a party, but like... teammates walking into sports practice and you have to bizou them three times.  It got a little obnoxious.  I like it.  But I'm still a little weirded out by it.  I like hugging better hahaha.  After practice Mollie, Jilli, and I grabbed some Indian style kebab and then headed to the English pub, the Shakespeare, where one of the guys on the team hosts a bilingual quiz night on Tuesdays.  Alas, there was no Guinness on tap, so I got some weird English stout I had never heard of... 7 euro!  Absolutely absurd.  Oh well.  When in Rome...

I liked the atmosphere of the pub a lot.  When we were ordering drinks, Mollie heard a group of boys speaking German at the table next to us and told me and I got so excited and sat down and started speaking German to them... turns out they were all Swedish and were visiting one guy who was studying in Montpellier.  One lived in Austria and one in Switzerland though, so they all spoke German.  Being Swedish, their English was perfect and they actually could've passed as Americans when they spoke, but I insisted they speak German with me.  It was nice to talk with them if only for a bit though, because the French weren't speaking to me again...c'est la vie.

Headed home when the pub closed just before one and on Wednesday Mollie and I headed to Avignon for the day, a little town about an hour away.  The city is in Provence, a different region than Montpellier.  It's famous for the massive papal palace that housed a number of popes centuries and centuries ago when they were facing strife in Rome and moved the seat of the Holy See for a bit.  When we saw the palace, I thought it looked pretty familiar and kind of thought I had been there before.  When I got back to Münster, I looked at my pictures from my trip to Spain, France, and Italy in 2006, and sure enough- I had been to Avignon and had a picture of the palace at night! 
Papal Palace

Bridge to Nowhere
Nevertheless, the city was still beautiful and had a nice park situated atop the city that offered magnificent views of surrounding Provence.  There was also the "Bridge to Nowhere" which is a bridge that only goes halfway across the river- turns out the other part of it was destroyed a couple centuries ago.  It was another beautiful day, and we were tired from walking so we decided to sit down outside a pub to have a drink.  Turns out happy hour had just started, so we stayed for a couple and then got back to the train station at 8.  Well, this being France and not Germany...trains do not run as late.  So there were no more trains back to Montpellier.  We didn't realize this though, until we were on a train going the wrong way.  So Mollie talked to the ticket checker and he told us getting off at Arles, the next stop, would be the best bet.  Then we got stuck in Arles.

Mollie was kind of freaking out and I felt bad for not freaking out too, but honestly I was fine cause I hadn't lost my phone.  Everything in perspective!  She called all her friends though, and they told us there wasn't another train until the morning, so we took a cab into the center of town to a hotel they told us had vacancies.  Well, the hotel was locked.... so we continued walking, and the city was DEAD.  Like not a soul anywhere, it was actually kind of creepy.  Finally we saw the lights of a Best Western and knew that would be open, so we headed in there and purchased a room for the night.  The concierge was actually German who had American relatives and was living in France.  What a world!

We felt really, really, realllllly stupid about missing the train, but it was an honest mistake.  And I think it's really good we were with each other, because both of us have so much experience traveling and were able to keep calm and figure out what to do.  Grabbed some sandwiches and then passed out in our beds and had a nice night's sleep.  Woke up the next morning, and although we had to wear the clothes we had been wearing all day... we had clean underwear!!!  We had done some shopping again in Avignon, mainly along the lingerie lines, and hey- turns out to have been a clutch purchase because we had clean underwear to wear.  Headed down to a massive German-style breakfast and proceeded to stuff our faces.  Then headed out to explore Arles! 

Arles is very small but has lots of Roman stuff.  We passed by some Roman ruins and then by a big Roman arena!  It was raining most of the time we were there but the city was still really pretty.  Very quaint and French.  Again, the arena looked very familiar.... lo and behold I got home and looked back at my photos from that same trip and turns out I had been to Arles as well.  But I hadn't been with Mollie before!

Arena in Arles

After our exploring, we got on the train back to Montpellier.  It was still raining, but Sarah and I went for a run anyways.  Mollie went to practice and I packed up all my stuff and hung out with Sarah a bit...she got back pretty late and we concluded MSM in our pajamas on our electronix.  Lol.  It had been a very tiring and exhausting month!  And then I had to wake up at 5:30am to catch the shuttle to the airport for my morning flight back to Germany.  Hugged Mollie goodbye, but hopefully I'll see her again in May when we might take a random trip somewhere. 

Conked out on the flight again, and then flight attendant actually had to push me awake to put up the window shade during landing... embarrassing because I had drooled all over the place.  Classy, I know.  Do you drool more when you're tired??  Katherine and I were wondering this because she said she's been drooling as well even though both of us usually don't.  But I drooled in Berlin, in Montpellier, on the plane, and then in Mainz as well.  But after a couple good nights of sleep in my bed in Münster...no drool!  Sorry...TMI? ;)

Arrival back at good ol' Frankfurt Hahn and was welcomed back to Germany with snowwww!  Shuttle bus to Mainz where I Katherine and her friend Sam met us who had been visiting all week from the States.  We went to Austin's and just kind of hung out hiding from the snow.  Went and got a drink at a cute little German pub-- and the beer was only 3,50-- ahh times like these I love Germany!  Then got dinner at an Italian place and looking around me at everyone in the restaurant, I really was happy to be back in Germany.  The land of the tall and the blonde and the beautiful.  The land where I can understand people and speak to people.  The land where I understand trains and know that they'll run past 8pm and the land where I have a bank account and the land where I know what products each grocery store has and the land where I can complain about the weather all I want and fit right in with all the other Germans.

As I said, my week in France was great, but disappointing just along the cultural lines, but the pro that came out of that was missing Germany-- something I needed for these final three months here.  I went home last over a month ago now and was crying at the gate when I had to come back... because I was leaving my most familiar home.  But this time around, I was excited to get back to Germany because France was much more unfamiliar than Germany to me.  Mollie and I were talking about this while I was with her- she had a great time in Germany, but still really missed France... she knows France and knows how the people are and knows the culture and how to do day to day things.  And that's how I felt in France- I enjoyed my time and love visiting the beautiful country and eating the delicious food, but at the end of the day, I missed Germany- I missed familiarity- this country I've now lived in for a total of more than a year if you count my time abroad.  It's just a really cool thing to be able to know another country and culture so well, that you can actually miss it when you travel somewhere new-- and miss it first and foremost before your home country.

But the rest of Easter...!  Saturday was the only say from Friday-Monday that stores were open because of Good Friday, Easter Sunday, and Easter Monday (and the Europeans claim to not be religious...) so Austin, Katherine, and I spent a record amount of money at the grocery store for dinner and Easter brunch, and of course chocolate.  Katherine and I both gave up candy and chocolate for Lent so I was counting down the hours until Easter.  We cooked some dinner, drank a bit too much wine, and then headed to the Irish Pub where an Irish duo was playing and they were great!  The Guinness wasn't bad either!

The three of us shared Austin's double bed that night and I got the shaft and got stuck in the middle, but I didn't even mind too much because at least that kept me warm.  Woke up like kids on Christmas Day- the clocks moved forward an hour the night before so we were a little more groggy than usual.  Nevertheless, dressed in our Easter best and headed to the cathedral for church!  (NB- Germans do not share the concept of Easter best- although everyone stayed in their coats during the service, it was clear that the three of us were in the small minority that had dressed up for the occassion...c'mon!  Easter dress is one of the best parts of Easter!!) 

Service started at ten and we got there at 9:45 but still had to stand for the two hour service which was actually wicked painful, but I just kept thinking of Jesus the whole time.  The service was beautiful though-  I remembered back to Easter service I attended in Vienna when I was abroad, and the cardinal archbishop presided, and there was a massive choir and orchestra, and they did the entirety of one of the Bach masses and I was blown away.  This service was very similar- a massive choir and orchestra and the cardinal archbishop, but this time it was a Schubert mass.  After the service, we headed back, and I broke open the chocolate bar I had stored in my purse.  We had awoken to a bright blue sky, but when we left the cathedral, the sky had turned grey and then it snowed all day.  Thanks Germany.  Coldest March in 100 years is right.

Easter service in the Mainzer Dom

BRUNCH
Brunch was great--mimosas, french toast, fruit, eggs, sausage, and so much chocolate and candy I wanted to die by the end of the day.  We were all just so tired that we just layed around and watched movies all day and ate and played with snap peas.  Headed back to Katherine's, passed out, and then caught the train back to Münster in the morning.  It was a beautiful blue sky for the first day of April.  I shared a compartment with a nice old German lady who kept speaking German to me, but she spoke so quietly I couldn't really understand her, but a nice chat nonetheless.  And she gave me leftover purple dyed hard-boiled egg!  So nice!  Germans are the nicest! 

OKAY. WOW. That was lot.  If you're tired of reading this, don't worry, I'm tired of typing this.  I've been back in Münster the last couple years just sleeping, eating chocolate, and running because it's actually been really sunny and close to 50 degrees!  Amazing!  Heading to Hannover tomorrow for a couple days and then I'll be back on Saturday before work begins again on Monday!  That's a wrap!