Monday, September 29, 2014

Being an American never felt so good!

Okay, whats more American than two study abroad students taking a train 40 minutes each way and a bus on top of that to go to "the American Store"?  Nothing! Saturday was an all out American day for me!  My friend Will and I went to Antwerp to go to The American Store.  This place was pure heaven.  We found Beef Jerky, Peach Tea, Corn Bread mix, and even macaroni and cheese!  Will also had to indulge in two 12 packs of mountain dew because that is not typically sold here.  The man who owns the store imports everything from New York City.  But, he never has the same things so when you go, you never know what you are gonna find.

After the exhausting trip back home with our very bulky box (i tried to be helpful and carry it but then an angry Belgian lady yelled in french at Will for making me do the work..oops) We went to a local sports bar because the Arkansas vs Texas A&M game was playing and I was determined to call the hogs!  The best accomplishment of the night was convincing the entire bar to cheer for the Razorbacks! Now there are Razorback fans from all over Europe/people who hate texas a & m.... It was a good game with a depressing ending but the team has come a long way and I am always proud to root for my hogs!!
Sunday we had a little BBQ with some girls who go to Mizzou! It was great hanging out with new people!  We all had something to talk about and it was great! And starting the fire was very interesting! We had coals and newspaper but no lighter fluid and for the record, veggie oil is not flammable, and the scotch didn't help either, but it was a fun adventure!!  

All in all, it was a nice relaxing weekend that i needed!  Now im ready to take on the week ahead!!

Monday, September 22, 2014

Getting History in Ghent

     This past week has been quite long so it seems.  I have been feeling the allergies of being in a new location once more (i can't seem to get it under control in a new place ever)! DayQuil has become my best friend! As always, i work through it with lots of coffee (one of the many fantastic things about my internship at the British School is the free coffee!!!)
     I have been working on all of my paper outlines which seem to be due at the same time.  As well as beginning my presentations for my classes.  I am with a group of 4 other students in my European Union Common Foreign and Security Policies class to create a presentation on the Middle East for this week.  All of us have background with taking classes on the History of the Middle East and we chose this region because of our previous work.  My section is on Palestine/Israel/Jordan which is an area I have studied greatly in the past 2 years.  I have a solo presentation to do today in my Contemporary Political Debates Class on Race in Politics.  It will be me for 10 minutes talking to the entire class with a powerpoint.  Next week I have to do my french presentation on an article of the french belgian culture and create an activity using the vocabulary of my choice.  I have chosen an article about food….no surprise there because I love Food!!!!  I chose to get all my presentations done by the 6th week of school so that I could spend the last half of my semester focusing on my million papers that I have due!  wish me luck in my endeavor to no go crazy by december!!!!
     Friday night, we had a Belgian food tasting! It was incredible.  I was able to mark all of the food off my bucket list from the previous article! We had "tasting" courses of a watercress soup, Pear and Cheese waffle sandwich thing, endive tart, blood sausages, mussels, mashed potatoes, bread, carbonade flamand which is beef and gravy, the belgian version of a Chicken Pot Pie (my personal favorite), and chocolate cake!  I was so full and satisfied by the end of the night! definitely my favorite experience so far!!!!
     This past saturday, the ISA group and I took a day trip to Ghent, Belgium!  We had some lovely visitors from the office in Austin, Matt and Blair, whom i have been emailing since my freshman year.  It was great to put a face with the names!  Pa, one of our lovely site staff, joined us as well.  We got to see a lot of the city by walking around on a history tour.  By the time I got home, I was well ready for bed.  I was exhausted and i am sure my attitude portrayed it.

Sunday, September 14, 2014

Paris Part 2!

     Pardon the somewhat long post but a lot has gone on this past week or so!  Starting with our program trip to a chocolate factory where we got to literally play with chocolate!  It was so much fun!!  Two of us got to go behind the scenes and learn how to correctly fill the bonbons, we were even offered jobs.  Then the whole group got to make our own chocolate creations including our names or just plain pieces with fruit in them!
     This weekend, my friend Jen and I went to Paris!  I was glad I got to be with her when she experienced Paris for the first time.  Seeing the monuments again was just as awesome the second time around.  It will never get old!  And Jen loves the tv show Gossip Girl just as much as I do so we tried to go everywhere they filmed during the Paris episodes….I have never felt so special shopping when you would walk into these fancy stores and there is a door attendant. She and I both dislike museums but we felt obligated to see the Mona Lisa so we went and took selfless with her.  Paris was an exhausting city and I am definitely glad to be back in Brussels getting back to my routine.  There are fewer tourist here, which is fantastic.  I strongly dislike the attention tourist attract in places like Paris.  There were lots of "gipsy girls" around paris walking up asking if you speak english and wanting you to sign a petition for things such as helping the deaf.  It is just a ploy to distract people to try to pickpocket them.  all you learn to do is ignore them and keep walking.  what they are doing is highly illegal!  same as all the men walking around trying to seek you eiffel towers for cheap but all they do is distract you.  Its something to watch for future travels! We knew to just stay away from anyone walking up to talk to us and just keep on our merry way.
     Classes are starting to pick up pace and I've got three presentations to do in the next 3 weeks and several paper proposals to begin writing!  I am not a fan of having class one day a week for three hours but not much I can do about that except bring lots of snacks to hold me over!!
     I am loving my internship at the British School of Brussels! The people I am working with are just fantastic! They have welcomed me to their team with open arms!  And to be honest, I love spending time with the British, I am still learning english apparently! They have funny names for some things and we all get a kick out of the different words for things such as "fanny" and "hair bubble" (ponytail holder).  I am starting my own dictionary in my notebook to remember all these words.  They are not quite as weird as the French/Dutch names for metro stops tho, the french version is so beautiful such as Cimetiere d'ixelles and the dutch version is jus weird..begraafplaats van Elsene.  Not even close!!!  It brings a smile to my face every day when i pass all of these stops.  

     I can't believe i have been here for 4 weeks already!  So far, this has been my best study abroad trip. I have managed to make it over three weeks without getting food poisoning from random sushi, which is a step in the right direction!  I am surprised how normal Brussels feels to me now, but i still miss everything about home!  Next trip on my list is Ghent with the ISA program this saturday! It should me nice and low-key!


Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Houseboat....Amsterdam Style

     This past weekend some other girls studying abroad and I went on a trip to Amsterdam!  We found relatively inexpensive bus tickets on eurolines and a "nice" houseboat to stay in for 3 nights.  The boat was not luxurious, but it was livable.  The best part was the experience of being able to stay on a boat in the center of Amsterdam on a canal.  We walked around the town on our own and found cute cafes to have our breakfast/brunch, nice stores to get post cards in, and to the Iamsterdam monument.  We also took time out to go to the Heineken Experience which was definitely worth the 18 Euros.  We got to see how the beer was made and learn the proper way to taste beer by getting a free beer.  After the tour, you are given tokens for two additional free beers! YAY! money well spent for sure.  We also took a canal tour that showed us the Jewish Quarter and the Ann Frank House, but because of The Fault In Our Stars, the Ann Frank House is immensely popular and the line was way to long to go through the museum. 
     Amsterdam was nothing like I expected you would be walking along a nice street, and bam! red lights... I am not going to detail that portion of the experience but it is shocking how "free" it is to have window space.  
     Overall, it was a great experience to travel to the Netherlands. Something very different than Belgium. We were all sad to leave and go back to reality, but when we remembered that reality was Belgium, not going home home, we felt better.