Thursday, December 4, 2008

Esperanzas

hahah, I leave Santander for Bilbao tonight, then early tomorrow morning I fly out of Bilbao on a long trip home. Jesucristo, I can't wait!!! Here´s to hoping that I make all my flights and don't get stranded in Frankfurt or Sea-Tac. That would suck majorlly. But if all goes as planned I will be home in Portland at 3:30 pm on Friday. I'm a little bit sad to leave, but that is overshadowed by my overwhelming excitement to be home.



Adiós, Spain!

Monday, December 1, 2008

Bienvenidos a diciembre, bienvenidos a mi ultima semena en España. Today my group gave a news report in our España Actual class. This was no ordinary news show. In the middle of the weather report we all busted into a dance routine. That's what's so great about Americans. We are spontaneously and enjoy the moment like that. Actually, that's not really an American thing, per say, as I know a lot of uptight, unfun Americans who don't know how to live up every moment. I guess it's more of my thing, and a characteristic of the people I choose to surround myself with. In my life I've had a lot of opportunities where I could have been embaressed and chickened out, but I figure, you only live once and you have to enjoy every moment, so I am willing to make myself look stupid in order to have fun. Even if that means jumping up on a desk in the middle of a presentation to dance to Britney, or saying yes to the 7 foot cowboy that asked me dance in Portland...Don't even ask, or maybe you should, it's a hilarious story.

This week will be slighly arduous, simply because it's finals and I also have to worry about my loooong trip back home. I do plan on going out Wednesday night to say Adíos to Spain. I will try and make it epic.

Sunday, November 30, 2008

Only in Santander..

This has been my last weekend in Santander. Joder, the time has really flown by. I didn't believe it when I was told at the beginning the this trip would go really fast, but it's true. Yet at the same time, I feel as if I have been in Santander forever. It's almost like I can't remember what it's not like to live with my Spanish family, to have to speak Spanish just to get by, and to live in this overcrowded clusterfuck of a city.

I'm suprised at just how acquainted I've become with Santander, which makes me glad that I decided to stick around most weekends rather than do the touristy thing and travel around. A lot of people in my program traveled almost every weekend to places around Spain and Europe, and they wound up tired, stressed, and broke. Travel just stresses me out, and I absolutely hate feeling like a tourist, wandering around a city when I don't know where anything is, just seeing the superficial sites. I'm glad I stuck around Santander, and really got the feel of living in one place and becoming emmersed in the culture rather than being a tourist and only catching the superficial shell of a bunch of places. I think I gained a lot from it. I got to go to Salseton and Funky hot dance classes, and explore all around the city, and go to musuems and out at night. It's been a good 10 weeks.

At the same time, I'm not looking forward to coming home and having everyone telling me how much fun I must have had, and what a big party my study abroad experience was. I would say, on a whole, this trip was more work than it was fun. I know some people have studied abroad and it was a haze of binge drinking, misbehavior, and merry making, but that's not what my trip has been. Its been incredibly valuable for other reasons, in terms of how much I've learned and how much I've grown up, and I wouldn't trade that for anything, but if I wanted to have fun and party I would have stayed in Corvallis, with my cat, horses, coffee shops, and college bars. So if I come home and someone asks me about how much fun and crazy times I've had, don't be suprised to see me roll my eyes. I would call this an educational experience, granted one that I think everyone needs.

On to the actual fun part. On Friday I went to another dance class, this one was called "Funky Hot" dance, which is basically hip hop. We learned a routine to a Britney Spears song, and it was sooo much fun. After the class two friends of mine and I wanted to keep dancing and not forget the routine, so we went to a park by the bay at 11 o'clock at night and danced on a bridge for 30 minutes in the dark. Only in Santander...

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Hi gang... I've been super busy lately, with finals, speeches, papers, and a big trip to Segovia, Toledo and Burgos.

About my trip:

Segovia: There's an ancient roman aqueduct, which is neat, and a big cathedral, and a sweet ass castle that comes complete with a moat. We got to explore the castle, which had all kinds of armor and swords and cannons. I want to live in a castle someday...or maybe just a house with a moat. Before we went on a tour we had a disgusting lunch of green beans in tomato sauce and an entire leg-o-lamb. Bleck. I drank two glasses of wine to choke some of the crap food down, and then I realized that it was Spanish uber-table wine, with a 15% alcohol content. Whoops, I guess I was a little schnockered on the tour. It made everything much more interesting, even though I had to pee like seabiscuit. But I didn't hice pis en la calle. it was way too light and open for that.



Toledo: My favorite city in Spain so far. It pretty much hasn´t changed since medieval times. The streets are all old cobblestones, and are barely wide enough to fit one car, although the cars go whizzing through them. It still has the old Roman wall around it, and it's sort of like a labyrinth, with a million little alleys that lead nowhere. Just my kind of city. I was hanging out with some people that were too nervous about getting lose to go too far, so we said screw it and peaced out, and had a great afternoon. While I was there I finally confirmed what I'd always expected- I have an awesome sense of direction. I led Becky and I across the city and back again, without getting lost once. Which is a big achievement in Toledo. Not that I care about getting lost. Sometimes it's fun to get lost.

The most fun of the trip was going back to the hotel in Segovia that night. Our table drank three bottles of wine, and flirted with a water to get a fourth. We definately got judged by some of the other people, but seriously, fuck them. Some people need to learn how to cut loose and live. There's nothing wrong with drinking four glasses of wine and building a pillow fort. Yes, we built an awesome pillow for in the hall of the hotel. Everyone who wanted to go through had to crawl through our fort, which we named Fort America. Then we all went inside it and told ghost stories.

Burgos: We didn't spend too much time in Burgos. We went to the massive cathedral, and yes, it was really beautiful and neat and blah blah blah, I am kind of cathedraled out. Every two horse town in Spain has some fascinating church or catheral or collegiate with an interesting history and awe inspiring architecure, but at this point I would get more excited over a good coffee shop. We did see the building where Christopher Colombues met the Los Reyes Catololicos after returning from America. Then we had a disgusting lunch chock full of chorizo and veal. What is it with Spainards and eating babies?

Anyways, I have come to the conclusion that after I get home I will NEVER force myself to eat something that I don't feel like eating. 10 weeks of choking down food that I hate when I don't want to eat it will forever change my opinions on eating what is on my plate. It's not healthy to eat when you're not hungry. This isn't the Great Depression. It'll just make you fat and give you high cholesterol. So as soon as I get home I am eating only WHAT I want, WHEN I want. Sorry mom! No pork chops and steak for me, ever. I don't think I've written it here, but I got the whole "You should finish what is on your plate because there are starving kids in Africa" lecture from Maria a week or so ago. Um, I think I am a little too old for that, by like 15 years. PLus what I didn't eat was the fatty disgusting boney part of a piece of salmon, the skin, and the bones. If the starving kids want it so bad she can pack it up in a box and ship it to them.

I miss American music. Sure they play some American music...but old (2 years or more) pop crap...Lots of Fergie and Rihanna (Umbrella, ella ella, eh, eh). Bleck. I can't wait to be home, in my car, rocking out to some heavy metal. I can't wait to go home and buy lots of music. I can't get any here. The cds are ridiculously expensive (Like 20 EUROS for a CD that would be like $12 US dollars at home). And I never got labtop computer hooked up to wireless, so I can't get onto Itunes. Laaaame. I am so deprived.

Well, enough of my whining. In summation, Toledo: cool, wine: cooler. Spain: still not as great at the USA. And I come home in 2 weeks. Booyah!

Monday, November 10, 2008

Buen fin de semana

Hola a todos.

Friday night I went to a Salsaton class, which is a mex of salsa and reggaeton dancing...shit, it was hard! The instructor, Marta, was a beast. And by beast I mean an amazing dancer. When she did the routine it looking awesome. When I did it, not so much. But I stuck out the hour and a half class, which is more than I can say for some other lazy asses, and it was fun to learn some (sorta) Spanish dancing, completely in Spanish. Afterwards I went out and drank too many mojitos, but whatever. I haven't had a mojito in forever, and I really wanted one.

Saturday I went to Bilbao, which is the capital city of Basque Country. It really has a different feel from the rest of Spain. The architecture of quite different, and every sign is in both Spanish and Basque (Euskera), which is the single most complicated language ever. It's actually not related to any known language, so there's not any cognates to clue you in. When I saw basque writing my brain processed it as letter vomit. We did some shopping and exploring around Bilbao and eventually found the Guggenheim Museum.

The musuem was amazing. The building is craaazy, and actually my favorite part of the whole museum. There's no way to explain it, it's like something out of a crazy, LSD-induced dream. Frank Gehry is a genius. In a way it almost overshadows the art within it, it is that awesome. The museum also has an exhibit by Richard Serra called The Matter of Time which is a giant installation of steel scultures that you could walk through. I loved wandering through the huge steel spirales. There was also a big exhibit of Cy Twombly, which was mainly minimalist art. To put it plainly, minimalism isn't my cup of tea. Sure, it's considered art, but I don't really value it too highly if a Kindgartner could do it. Like crayon scribbles on a canvas, or two cardboard tubes glued together and painted white. Really Guggenheim? You're going to put that on the first floor and make me go up to the third to see the Velazquez painting?

Someday I am going to poop on a canvas and call it art.

Thursday, November 6, 2008

I feel very deprived from a lot of things. A lot of American things. American music, TV, food, people, english...just everything that I take for granted but feel very lost without. I think this trip is teaching me just how much I enjoy the US, Oregon, Corvallis, etc. And when I have a bad day, it's not like I can do the things that usually cheer me up, like go riding, or pet Lilly, or get multiple coffee drinks. Yeah, I have been known to get coffee 2 times a day when I am really stressed. Whatevs.

On a postive note me and a group of OSU kids, and one of our professors played Sardines (reverse hide and go seek) in the streets of Santander. For those of you who don't know, Sardines is where one person hides and the rest look for them. When you find them, you hide with them until everyone is hiding with you. We got the weirdest looks from some Spainards, who probably didn't understand why there were 12 people crammed into a single door frame, giggling like crazy and speaking in English. Oh well. It's not like I am not use to getting weird stares from Spanish people. That happens all the time. At least I feel like we deserve when we are all huddled in a smelly little corner by the mercado, with our jackets over our face so that no one will know it´s us and find us.

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

La Eleción

I will be extremely glad when the elections are over. Not because I particularly want to know the results. I'm fairly confident that they won't be to my liking, but such is politics. I know how to lose gracefully, and I haven't put my heart and soul into any campaigns like I did in '06. No, I want this elections to be over because I am so sick of hearing what Europeans think about American politics. They can't vote, so why would I care about what they think?

I've touched on this before, but everybody, and I mean EVERYBODY here has an opinion about US politics, and who they want to win the election. Which I understand, because hey, America is the best ever, but at the same time I don't, because I honestly don't give a crap about who becomes the new British PM, or whether Zapatero wins relection here in March. Americans have the reputation of being ego-centric...having lived abroad, my opinion is now: So what? If we are ego-centric, that's because the entire world cares so much about us. If the rest of the world wants us to think about ourselves less, then they should think about us less.

I don't even like talking about domestic politics at home because the majority of people are uneducated tard farmers who just go on hearsay and generalizations and treat them like facts. But foreigners who don't really understand the American political system are even worse. Yesterday I watched on the news some special about how hut-dwelling pgymies of Kenya (or whatever they are) like Obama. As if I give a rat's ass about the political leanings of hut-dwelling Kenyan pgymies. Or every Spanish cab driver that's driven me home at 3 in the morning...or every single person that I meet in a bar that finds out I'm an American. Let's repeat this. I. Don't. Care. If you can't vote, I couldn´t care less. Europeans seem to have the misconception that Americans want to hear their stupid opinions about our own elections...Sorry Europe, but you don't matter. Go play with your Euros and leave me the hell alone.

PS. African pgymies have recieved a shit ton of foreign aid from the Bush administration...they should take that free money and STFU.

Monday, November 3, 2008

Que pasó...

On Thursday the ETA set off a car bomb in a University in Pamplona. I don’t think anyone died, but last I heard 17 people were injured. You would think that being so near to Basque country makes me hyper-aware of the ETA and all the possible dangers associated with it, but…no? Really Santander feels so safe, and so isolated that I haven’t really spared the ETA a single thought this entire trip. Maybe if I was in a big city, like Madrid or Barcelona I would be nervous, but Santander is very safe. By all means maybe I should be worried. The ETA has targeted public transport and universities, two things I frequent. But really, are we ever safe? Can I claim to be safer in Corvallis when things like the shooting at Georgia Tech and the abduction of Brooke Wilberger from Corvallis prove that, no, we’re not safe. We only think we’re safe until the worst thing possible happens, then we know for sure that we were never safe. So, just fyi, I feel real safe! PS if the ETA was gonna blow shit up, they sure as heck wouldn’t do it in Santander…Santander is a tiny little tourist town as far as Spaniards are concerned.

I talked to my dad on Friday, and he told me that my mom wanted to bring me home right away…And surprising enough, my immediate gut-reaction was “No way, I want to stay!” Which suprised me at first, because at first I was counting the days until I get to come home and drink Starbucks and play with my cat. But you can't deny an immediate gut reaction, and that's what I got when I thought about coming home halfway through. I'm glad that I am here, and I'm even more glad that I want to be here.

There’s tons of little Confeterias around town that sell frutas secas(gummy candy). I got some on my way home from church…and ate way too much. Now I feel sick. Tonteria, no? Oh yeah, I went to church. It was very suprisingly similar to regular church. It was an evangelical church, so not too different. Not catholic mass. I have no desire to go to Catholic Mass. I don't understand what's going on when the service is in English, much less in Spanish. Anyways, church was fun. They sang some of the same songs we sing at Trinity, only in Spanish (dur). Another thing that is similar about going to Spanish church- I spent the entire sermon day dreaming. Hey, at least I have an excuse this time. I didn't really understand. When I daydream during church at home it is because I am a bad lutheran/ i´m not sitting by my friends and can't pass notes.

I stepped in my first pile of mierda de perro español (Spanish dog shit). I feel like an authentic Spainaird.

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Good news...I got a new umbrella, at a Chinese Store (which is like the dollar tree only more stuff and it´s not a dollar). My other one was a wimpy dollar tree POS that kept blowing inside out and was already ripped...but this new, communist-made one is bright pink, huge, strong, and totally ready to take on the next old lady that gets in my personal space with her own umbrella. Get ready, viejas! It's UMBRELLA WAR time! And this time I am armed for battle.

Monday, October 27, 2008

Porque...no sé

From what I've read, culture shocks comes in waves of frusteration and acceptance. And from what I've experienced, this is also true. Studying abroad is a constant flow of being incredibly excited and loving all the new experiences one minute, to hating everything about the host country the next. Well, maybe not hating everything, but vehemently disliking.

I would say that my acceptance recently peaked around my birthday, and now I'm plateauting at the what-the-fuck-Spain stage for the moment. Seriously. Why must people pee on the stone walls near my apartment in broad daylight? Why does the guy sitting behind me in the cafe light up a cigarette when I am trying to study? Why don't old Spanish ladys know how to walk with an umbrella without putting someones eye out or making me walk in the street? Why do I always almost get hit by cars? Why is there so much dog shit everywhere? ¿Por qué, Spain? ¿POR QUÉ?!!!

To get over culture shock in the beginning I kept telling myself "Different doesn't neccesarily mean bad. It's just different." Now though I feel like hey, I know different is different, and it's not bad per say. But maybe I prefer things like they're done in the U.S. If anything I will come back home with a healthy appreciation for all things and customs American. Until then I will probably get lung cancer from second hand smoke...That is if I don't get run over by a car first.

Friday, October 24, 2008

Today I posted two blogs that I wrote on my laptop a bit earlier on the trip (September 26th and October 5th, if you want to go back and read them). The October 5th is notable for just how homesick and culture-shocked I was when I wrote it. It's nice to look back and see just how much things have improved in less than three weeks. It's crazy for me to think that I've been here for a month now. It doesn't seem like a month. I'm glad that everyone was right, homesickness does disappate after a while, and I'm also glad I didn't make a big deal of it even when I was pretty miserable. It let's me know I am growing up. Maybe I will even be an adult some day.

On Tuesday I was walking home from school and it was pouring down buckets of rain. So I was already wet. Then, a car drove into a puddle right as I was walking by and sent up a gigantic wave that completely drenched. Literally, I got soaked. I had to wring the water out of my clothes. And it was nasty Santander road water, and now I probably have some disease from it.


I'm having fun, but at times I get a little sad about what I am missing out on back home. Fall term is my favorite term at OSU, and I've only gotten to spend two of them there, as the first was wasted at Pretty Lame University as I like to call it. There are so many great things about Corvallis in the fall, and if I take time to think about it I really get a sense of what I'm missing out on- the fall polo season, football season, Halloween, fall and all the seasonal changes that I love...etc, etc. At times it's hard to think that I won't have another fall term there (if everything goes as planned with my education, la-di-da), and it makes me not appreciate being here so much. Oh well...nothing to do but suck it up I guess.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

¡Joder!

Through trial and error, we have found that the best way to find Spanish people to talk to is to go to a crowded public place and speak English loudly. Poorly spoken Spanish doesn´t have the same magical properties, and speaking it will only get you weird, judgemental glares. But rapid fire English is a sure bet. For some reasons that fascinates and excites Spanish people who know a little bit of English. So they loudly shout out words in English, and then ask the obligatory "¿De dónde eres? ¿Ingleterra?" And they get extra excited when they find out that we are American, or estadounidense. Then maybe they call their friends over to talk broken English to us, while we reply in poor Spanish. One thing is for certain: Spainards cannot pronounce my name. The gan sound is just not a part of their phoenetics. They like to call me "Me-han," which I guess I´m okay with. It´s better than Mr. Markealli, my 8th grade language arts teacher, who called me "Megs." Oh no you didn't...

On Saturday night we had a typical Spanish interaction with a bunch of old Spanish dudes. This interaction was notable for two things. First, when I tried to tell them my name, after I repeated it like 4 times they decided that it was Maggie. I figured why the heck not, as said that was right, yo soy Maggie. Which sent them into stupid Spanish laughter, and got the comment "Like the baby in the Simpsons!" Yes, they have the Simpsons here, only it is dubbed with weird voices. Anyways, dumb old guys laughed about my fake name for a while, then invited us to go somewhere to dance. ¡Joder no! (Joder roughly means fucking hell in Spanish). Much to my dismay, half of my group debated taking up the offer to go dancing with los viejos. At which point I went back into the bar to drink more calimocho, as that's what situations like these call for.

Sunday, October 19, 2008

¿McCain o Obama?

Interactions here in Spain with new people have seemed to take on a certain pattern. First, someone hears us speaking English, or figures out that I am not from around here because of the accent. First they ask if I´m from "Inglaterra" (England). I guess they figure it´s more likely that english speaking people are from England, because it´s so much closer although it seems strange to me because English accents are so distinctive. I correct them, and tell them that I´m from the United States. And, without fail, the next question is "¿McCain o Obama?" Which I don't like answering because usually the Spanish person likes Obama and wants to tell me why, and I don't give a crap because, seriously, they can't even vote. Sorry Spain, no one cares what you think about the U.S. I didn't even know the name of Spain's president before I get here, but every Spainard and their mother has a full set of opinions about U.S. elections. However, I did find one taxi driver that liked McCain, but I think that was more because he didn't like black people. I think. Sometimes my comprehension skills aren´t too good. but he definately called him Obama bin Laden. hah!

I refuse to pick up the Spain accent. Ricardo was trying to get me to use it properly on Friday night, but I really don´t want to. I know, when in Rome, right. But I have a feeling I will got back to the U.S. and be laughed right out of town by people that speak Mexican and South American Spanish if I have the Spain lisp. No gracias.

Something that is really common in Spain- Hacer pis en la calle (Peeing in the street). More popular than in Corvallis I think. It´s pretty common to be walking around and see several dudes pissing on a wall, or in a bush. What can I say, Spain is pretty sweet. My goal before I leave is to hacer pis en la calle. Let´s see how that works out.

PSA- I´ve noticed that I have a lot of typos in these entries. I´m not really that sloppy, and I have a good excuse. The Spanish keyboard is different from the American one, so it´s a lot easier to muck things up. So please don´t judge me for misspellings and wrong words. Or maybe my English is just getting worse. Pretty soon I will be speaking English just like the Spainards do. My favorite English phrase that I´ve heard from a Spanish speaker has been "I have to make a pee pee in myself." Of course, this was right before the speaker, our new friend Nacho, hizo pis en la calle. Funny story about that. I told Anna that he pooped in the calle too, as a joke, and she didn´t know it was a joke and was grossed out. I had to tell her the next day there was no mierda. ¡Qué raro!

Saturday, October 18, 2008

My birthday only got better after the last post. I had two friends come over for dinner, which was delicious. I know, what a suprise, I actually like the food in Spain for once! Well, it was because Maria made me lasagna, so it´s not even Spanish. So I still don´t like Spanish food, although I did eat something that I liked in Spain. I also got chocolate cake and a really cute shirt and necklace from my host family. I really lucked in when I got put in this family I think.

After dinner was time for fiesta. We went out and met in la plaza del Ayuntamiento, which is sorta central. Which we were there some Moroccan creepers started talking to us, and one of my friends told them it was my birthday, so of course they all had to kiss me on the cheek (bleck! I hate that!) and then I got a picture with them for shitz ´n giggles. Will post it when I get it, it´s actually on someone else´s camera. Then it was off to some Plaza with a bunch of bars.

We ran into a huge group of other students from OSU...yeah and that´s about it. That group´s kind of clique-y and definately not fun, so me and some other girls made sure to ditch them really quick. We found a bar called the Peter Pan with gigantic drinks, then went back to the Plaza. Then we went to another favorite discoteca. While there we saw a guy with a geri-curl mullet, and another dude with a mohawk-type mullet. Anna really wanted a picture of him, so Courtney and I went up to him and I told him that he looked like a friend from home and asked if we could have a picture. hah! Foolz. Sometimes I can be sneaky like that.

Then we went back to the plaza and talked to some Spanish guys for the rest of the night. I tried to teach them how to correctlyt pronounce Beach and Bitch and was met with little success. Then they tried to teach me how to pronounce "Joder," which requires you to basically hack up a loogie to say the j sound properly, which I just couldn´t do. Que lastima. On the way home I got a taxi driver who liked McCain (Score!) and we spent the entire cab right making fun of Obama. Sometimes Spain suprises me, in a good way.

In other news, my new favorite Spanish phrase is "Me cagué en tu leche," which loosely translates as "I just owned you, sucka." Of course, it translate directly as "I shit in your milk." Que perfecto! I will definately be using this phrase when I return to the states.

Friday, October 17, 2008

Feliz cumpleaños a mí

Today is my birthday! I am 22 today. This is definately not as fun as turning 21, but I can´t complain too much. Tonight I am having two friends over for a special birthday dinner, then we are going out. I am super excited. Hopefully I will meet my future Spanish husband.


Today I went on another excursion with my group. First, we went to La Cueva del Castillo, which has this ancient cave paintings on the walls. It was so cool. This is La Cueva del Castillo: as you can tell, absolutely amazing. All these crazy stalagtimes, stalagmites, columns and rock formations. It was beautiful, and I think its so cool to stand in the same place that our ancestors stood thousands and thousands of years ago, and to see their artwork. It´s hard to believe that something can last for so long. I´ve always wondered how to make my mark on the world, and how long it will last after I am gone. So, basically, it would be a good idea to paint some junk in a cave, because that will last for milleniums!


Next we went to the Altamira museum. The Altamira Cave is a more famous cave with really amazing paintings in them. The caves themselves aren´t open to visitors because of the deterioration of the paintings, but the caves are recreated in the musuem. It was interesting, but not nearly as cool as seeing the actual paintings in Castillo, although I think the paintings in Altamira are gorgeous, in an ancient, simple way.


This is one of the bisontes (bison) from Altamira. Weird as it may seems, if I ever get a tattoo I would want it to be a recreation of one of the cave paintings in Altamira. This one is my favorite. Don´t worry mom and dad, I won´t come back with a bison tattoo, and tattoos can´t be that bad if Emilee has one, right?






After the visit through a musuem we went to a work shop on ancient cro-magnum hunting methods. It was really interesting, especially we got to throw spears at this big deer target. They actually use this other stick tool as a lever to chuck the spear harder, so it was kinda complicated. AKA, I sucked at it. I mananged to launch it about 5 feet. It was okay though, because no one hit el ciervo (the deer). The guy teaching us told us that if we were cro-magnum people, we would all be stuck eating setas (mushrooms). Good thing I live in the 21st century. I hate mushrooms.

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Oviedo

This weekend is a four day weekend, and I never got around to making big travel plans. Instead last minute I went with two friends to Oviedo, which is about 3 hours away in Asturias.

I love Oviedo. It´s a smaller town than Santander, and much less crowded. There were a couple of beautiful cathedrals (Pictures to come! Promise!), one of which I got to go inside of. It apparently had the body of some saint, but she was in a stone coffin thing, so you couldn´t actually see her. We also randomly wandered into an art musuem, because it was free admission. We also spent part of the day searching for a statue of Woody Allen. Why is there a statue of Woody Allen in Oviedo you might ask...Well, I have no clue. I was talking to a friend of my host family who came to dinner, and she told me about the statue. I asked her why there was a statrue of him there. Because of my sub-par comprehension skills I didn´t really catch the answer. Either he got an award, or he gave Oviedo an award, or something, but he came to Olviedo and he really liked the gastronomy (her word, not mine) and some other junk, and voila, there´s a statue of him there. And yes, I did find it really randomly, and I got a picture with it. And that´s about it for my trip to Oviedo.

Other observations about Spain in general:

  • The concept of La Casa and La Calle. People that have studied in Spain (AKA Jennifer) will know this, but maybe everyone elso won´t. In Spain, the house is sacred and thus is kept immaculate. The outside of the apartment building might look like the slums, but the inside is incredibly nice. People spend a lot of time, money, and effort to take care of their homes. It´s also a big ideal to get invited into a Spanish person´s home. On the flip side, the calle (street) belongs to everyone, so no one gives a shit about it. No one really cares about keeping the environment outside of the home pristine. People throw trash and stuff on the ground without a second thought, which seems so wrong to my good Oregon senses. It´s almost like a reversal of the culture back home, where you may let your house get messy and run down here or there (or maybe all the time), and no one gives a crap, but everyone works together to keep communal areas (parks, streets) clean.

  • The return of The Mullet. For some god awful reason, mullets seem to be back in style in Spain. And not layered, semi-mullets but honest-to-God business in the front, party in the back mullets. And it´s not on trashy looking guys either. The ones I´ve seen rocking it look pretty stylish, not like if they were in the U.S. they´d be residing in a trailor park. I just don´t get it. Ánd I´ve seen way to many of them for this to just a random mullet encounter. It´s a real epidemic, albeit one that I enjoy.

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Estoy enferma

I have gotten the inevitable study abroad cold. Bleck. There´s no reason to get sick when your mom isn´t there to take care of you, or you can´t even get real chicken noodle soup or a starbucks. No bueno. Oh well. I´m still going to Oviedo this weekend, this cold can suck it. Hopefully I don´t hurl in class tomorrow.

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

De Puta Madre

The title of this post is a local colloquialism, that basically means "the shit," or something that is really good. This is not to be confused with hijo de puta, which means son of a bitch. Es de puta madre is a good thing, albeit not something you would say in church or in front of your grandparents. In my grammer class we had to write sentances with all 4 past tenses in them, in a certain order, and I wrote such an awesome sentance that my professor, Esther, said it was de puta madre. Go me. Yo soy de puta madre.

La comida de aqui y yo no nos llevamos bien. I don´t like the food at all. I guess I´m a pretty picky eater when I am at home, and here, where everything is just randomly prepared for me is the pits. Maybe once every few days there will be something that I like, but who can get by on one good meal every 3 days? Let´s take today for example. For lunch I had boiled green beans (bleck!) to start out with. Wait, it gets worse. For the main course I had pescado. And by pescado I mean little fried fish. They were about 4 inches long, complete with skin, tail, and the spine. My host mom told me that you are suppose to eat them whole. I choked down one and couldn´t take anymore. 3 hours later I still feel queasy. Maria was suprised that I didn´t like them, because apparently they are delicacy in Santander. Man, I wish I had taco bell right now, or mashed potatoes and gravy. I went to try to buy snacks yesterday, but I only had a little luck. All the food is different, and the grocery stores don´t have the American snacks that I like. I did, however, find salt and vineger potatoe chips and chips ahoy. Let´s see if that lasts me 9 more weeks...

I learned in culture class today that some people in Spain eat horse and cat, because it is cheap. This makes no sense to me. I know people all over the world eat weird stuff, but come on. We are in Western Europe! Spainards discovered America. Why should they eat horses?! I keep picturing Love Bug on a dinner plate, and it is very unpleasant.

There are absolutely no espresso shops in Santander. Am I in the wrong town or what? On the plus side, I finally feel like I kinda sorta know my way around town. At least I haven´t gotten lost since that unfortunate night when I missed my bus stop. I went to the beach on Sunday and it was cool. Now I can say that I have been in the Atlantic Ocean...well, kinda. It´s actually the Cantabrian Sea. But it´s attached to the Atlantic, I think.

Mom- If I understood correctly in art class (chances is I didn´t though), in some cathedral in Santander there are the heads of the two patron saints of the city. They´re over a thousand years old I think. It seems disgusting, but I would love to go and see them. If I go I hope I can take pictures. Nothing says semester in Europe like two ancient rotten heads.

Sunday, October 5, 2008

Tengo morrina. That means that I am homesick. It was bad at first, then as the week wore on it got better, and now this weekend it has worsened a lot. I was talking to Emma, one of the members of my host family, and she asked me if I was happy, because apparently I look sad sometimes. I don’t want to look sad, and I don’t want to count the days until I am home.


Everyone that I talk to likes to tell me how lucky I am, and ask just how much fun I am having, and don’t I love it here. I feel like a retard when inside I’m not having the time of my life. Maybe other people that have been abroad understand. It’s not easy, and there are a lot of things that aren’t fun about it. This isn’t all a breeze. No one told me that this would be hard. I think almost every foreigner feels like this. Everything is different, and I am far away from the things I love, and I don’t even have the luxuries of the things that make me happy when I am down, like my cat, Starbucks, 5$ hot and ready pepperonis from Little Cesar or watching Adult Swim on Cartoon Central at night. When I was at PLU and hated it my dad always told me to do little things to get through each dad, and just go day by day. But I’m not in the U.S. anymore, so I can’t find those little things that make stuff easier.


I can’t focus on enjoying my experience here when I am so caught up in missing everything back home. And I really want to succeed. I want to have so much fun that I don’t want to come home. But maybe I need to redo my definition of success. Maybe I will discover that Europe is not the place for me. Even if I spend every single last day homesick, in culture shock and wishing for a caramel macchiato and taco bell, I will still have gained a lot. Holy crap will my Spanish get better. This really is the best way for improving it rapidly. And there will be a lot less that fazes me. Seriously, how can I not grow up and be more confident when I’ve traveled across the world all by myself and survived 2 and a half months in a foreign country?

Saturday, October 4, 2008

Excursion 1

Yesterday my group went on its first excursion. Unfortunately, the bus had to go through a canyon that I will affectionately call ¨la calle del diablo.¨ Carsickness galore. Several people had barf bags in hand, ready to go. I however, refused. I´ve never puked from motion sickness before, and I don´t intend to start. I just got really sick, in fact I still feel sick now a day later.

First we went to this monastary that has a piece of the actual cross that Jesus was crucified on...so say the Catholics. They actually had some scientific tests done, and it really is a 2000 year old piece of wood. How cool would that be if it was real? I even got to touch the piece of wood. I´m not Catholic or anything (I actually think they´re a bit nutty), but it was a really deep, cool feeling to touch the piece of wood that thousands upon thousands of pilgrims have touched. It was really soft, from so many people touching it over the centuries. The monastary itself was beautiful, and you could hear the monks chanting in the background.

Later we went up a god-awful tram to the Picos de Europa mountains, where it was snowing! We even had a snowball fight, and a few crazies made snow angels. It was soooo high up. I definately did not enjoy the tram ride up, but I did enjoy the cup of copy I had at the top, and playing in the snow.

Next was a little town called Potes...and that´s about it. I bought three postcards. Yay Potes.

Finally we went to this 1000 year old church, supposedly one of the oldest in Cantabria. It had this really cool alter with a statue of Mary that got stolen in 1990, and was found 8 years later in Valencia and then returned. The church also had two 1000 year old trees, one olive and one was something else that I forgot, but it was pretty much dead. There was also this bench there that supposedly, if you sit on you will soon get married. Emilee, you should go there...hehehehe. I admit it, I sat on it, without about 1/2 of my group.

Then, it was back on the bus to get super carsick again.

Last night I went out for the first time. My first impressions of Spainish nightlife: they are uber smokey, the guys are short, and everyone stays out too late. I ended up talking politics with this one Spanish guy, and then I taught good American curse words. I stayed out until 3 am, which apparently isn´t too late in Spain, but seems crazy to my good American senses.

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Mas larga...

My First full day in Spain was not the easiest. I´ve always thought that I had a pretty good sense of direction, and I don´t get lost that often, especially if I have a map. Well, here I don´t know which way is which, where anything is, or probably even where my own ass is. And it´s different to be lost when you don´t have anyone you can call for help or directions, or when the language everyone is speaking isn´t your own.



I´m glad to be here, but enough excuses. My goal now is to figure out how to enjoy this experience, not to just survive it. I want to find things here that I like, so that I don´t spend my time here missing my favorite things from home.

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

First post in Spain

I´m here! The keyboard is weird, the food is disgusting, and the men are full of cat calls. Viva Espana!

I have another blog to post when I get my laptop hooked up to the university´s Wifi. I am in the computer lab now, or the Pareninfo.

Holy crap, no one told me how hard it was to live in a different country! I will definately have a world of sympathy to an immigrant to the U.S.

Friday, September 26, 2008

He llegado

I finally made it! I thought the trip would never end. I’ve never been on such a long flight, and it wasn’t too fun. I feel bad for my dad. I don’t know how he does it. I did decide though, that I don’t like Germans. They are loud, pushy, and rude and their language makes me want to punch a kitten. Sorry Emilee, the Fatherland was not all it’s cracked up to be. At least Frankfurt International Airport. Enough about the Germans. Sauerkraut sucks and they lost two world wars.

Customs in Spain- Ha! When I was waiting for my luggage, there was this customs lady in a uniform, screaming at people in quick, incomprehensible Spanish, which made me really nervous, because I didn’t want to have to talk to her in Spanish. I got my luggage and started to walk away when she yelled something at me which I didn’t understand but knew meant stop. So I froze, and waited as she yelled at and searched some Asian travelers. I was thinking “Oh crap, me next,” but as soon as she got to me she asked, in perfect English, “What country are you from?” When I told her the United States, she waved me right on through. Heck yes.
At the bus station in Bilbao, I saw some crazy yelling homeless dude with about 8 cops surrounding him, yelling back at him. Bienvenidos a Espana.

Right now I am excited, but a bit homesick. I always get a little bit of separation anxiety though, so that is to be expected. When I was nervously awaiting my trip, I did some thinking. Sure, it would be a lot easier, and a lot more comfortable to stay in Corvallis, and have a normal fall term. A million times easier, in fact. Traveling here was also a herculean effort, and I don’t even know how I made it. But I decided that my there for this trip would be “Nothing ventured, nothing gained.” You don’t grow as a person or learn new things by sitting around at home, drinking Starbucks and watching Scrubs (which is what I would be doing, probably!). I need to come out of my comfort zone if I want to grow at all. This might not be the easiest trip, but I at least made it here, and as I get settled I’m hoping things start to get fun!

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Getting Ready

Yesterday, I got one step closer to being ready to go to Spain. What did I do? I got a freakin' tetanus shot. Laaaaame. I forgot how much they hurt. Basically, I couldn't even move my arm yesterday. It felt like I got punched by Chuck Norris. Are shots suppose to hurt like that?

I wasn't even going to get it. I went to see my doctor for something else and my mom LEFT A NOTE for my doctor on her desk telling her I needed the shot. My mom is sneaky like that. If you ever wonder where I got my sneakiness and evil masterminding ability, I got it from my mom. However, I got bad gums from my dad.

Monday, September 15, 2008

Mi primero blog, en los Estados Unidos

Hola a todos. I'm writing this a week and a half before I actually leave for Spain. I hope to use this blog to thoroughly document my term in Spain, and to let my friends and family know how I am doing. This will be the experience of my life, and I want to remember it!

More to come when I'm not busy packing and watching American TV.