Category Archives: North America

Location: Clarks Summit, Pa

An email worth opening

Life has been a little surreal lately. Maybe it’s because I haven’t been a real person, more of a couch potato on break from school waiting to go abroad. All the days have been mashing together and if you asked me the date, I would laugh at you. Needless to say, I’m ready to go to France. Not physically of course because I’m too scared to attempt fitting all my clothes in a suitcase, but mentally. All my relatives kept asking over the holiday if I was ready to leave, and I always replied with the same, “Yes of course, but it still doesn’t seem real to me.” I couldn’t believe I was going to Aix-en-Provence, France in three short weeks. I had been planning this moment since freshman year, yet it still didn’t feel tangible. Slowly though, as I crossed things off the to-do list (the visa, the phone, the money), it started to sink in.

I checked my email (I know, rare for a student on winter break) the other day to delete some of the hundred junk emails I got, when I came across a name I was unfamiliar with. I opened the message to see that it was from my host family. I was a little confused since I hadn’t gotten any information from my university at the time, but that was only for a fleeting moment. I believe I actually screamed and jumped off the couch. My dad, who was startled by my strange non-couch potato-like behavior, asked for an explanation. It was my host mom and she gave me an introduction to the family I would be living with for the next five months, and she seemed just as excited as I was.

Good news! I heard from my host family.

Good news! I heard from my host family.

This settled a lot of nerves. I struggled deciding where I wanted to live in France. My first instinct was with a family, but I had heard so many horror stories from fellow students not enjoying their stays. But, I took a chance and, by the looks of the email, it seemed like it is actually going to be amazing.

Brigitte, the author of the email, told me about her husband, their 15-year-old daughter and their cat. She told me she has been hosting American students for ten years and she told me she would pick me up at the airport (what a saint!). They seem like everything I could have asked for. Immediately, I emailed her back with a little background about myself, while daydreaming about my life with this family. All the terrible scenarios I was given escaped my memory to make room for the possibilities. I can help her daughter with her English studies as she helps me with my French. I can listen to Brigitte tell stories of past students. I can walk the cobble-stoned streets to class in the morning.

Suddenly everything seems more tangible. I just needed that first interaction and now I can picture myself in living and studying France. Now I just have to figure out how to pack, and how I’m going to lift three suitcases up the stairs to their walk-up apartment.


Location: Clarks Summit, Pa

From Sandy Toes to City Streets

Though I don’t live in the Outer Banks, after traveling there every summer for the past twenty years I do feel like a local. Surrounded by so much family, a beautiful beach, and town, I found it harder to leave than I anticipated. No, this is technically not my home, however that didn’t make it any easier, instead it made it harder to cut my family vacation short for my London study abroad trip. Yet, who am I to complain? A week with my toes in the sand and then straight off to the London streets to learn, explore, and discover is certainly nothing to complain about.

So, before I have to brush the sand from my feet and lace up my tourist sneakers to travel around London, I decided I wanted to write down a few thoughts on some expectations for London that excite me and also what I have no clue about.

On the top of my list for my cluelessness column are my classes and the food. Every time I ask someone what cultural food London has the answer is always fish and chips. Yes, I assume London does have fish and chips, however I won’t be naive enough to think that London ONLY has one cultural delicacy I’ll experience. I’m not a picky eater by any means, yet I can’t help but be a little bit nervous about whether I’ll like the food or not (aside: this partially stems from the time I first spent two weeks in Germany and subsequently couldn’t eat pork for months afterwards).

My other, the classes, gives me feelings of nervousness and excitement mixed. With a tentative class excursion already in hand, I know that our day-to-day adventures will be well planned, unforgettable, and wonderful. Personally, having a partially structured schedule is a relief so that I can get myself more organized with what I want to do in my free time (hello Harry Potter tours and the London Theatre). On the other hand, the nervousness comes from those well-known first-day-of-school nerves, albeit now escalated in a foreign country. For example the questions: will I like my teachers, how can I fit in papers, homework, and readings, what if I completely flunk my classes, all continually spiral around in my head among the other never-ending what-ifs that follow.

Another smaller yet still significant “how do I prepare for that” I expect to be a bit challenging for me is the culture of London. Not many people, myself included, realize that London does have a vastly different culture than the United States. Although I cannot expand (yet) on just how/why/in what ways London is majorly culturally different from the U.S., I’m going in with an open mind and heart to face, enjoy and experience everything I possibly can while abroad.

 

Next, I will move on to my expected experiences column. Top of the list for me are the theater shows. As a dear lover of all things Broadway, I cannot wait to see all sorts of shows in London from Shakespeare to Wicked.

Similar to this is the history of literature that I’ll be exploring in my classes. As an English education major, I’ve always wanted to learn about literature beyond reading a simple book or play, and I also plan to teach in a similar manner. By visiting London, I get the amazing opportunity to learn literature first hand and then later incorporate what I’ve learned from London in my classes in the future (this trip crosses this item off of my bucket list). This goes hand in hand with field trips, which I’m by far the most excited for while in London. Our professors have so far set up a TON of awesome, already planned and varied types of day trips to take around London and neighboring areas that also coincide with what we’re learning in class. Again, as an education major, I love seeing how other teachers teach beyond a textbook. The Harry Potter tours/sightseeing also fall under this category. My preteen self has waited long enough to experience the magic of Hogwarts, so look out for later posts focused around this!

 

Lastly, my fellow travelers. One of the best parts about this trip (so far) is that I’ve been able to communicate with the other students in my class. Though this could sound simple and silly, what a relief it was for me to find out that most of the other kids on the trip love Ed Sheeran (who will be in London when we are) and Harry Potter, and seem like genuinely great people to spend a month abroad with. Since I’ve been abroad a few times before, I know the unexplainable bond you create with a group of people when traveling abroad. Usually traveling abroad allows you/forces you to step out of some type of comfort zone (i.e. trying new foods, being in an unfamiliar place with an unfamiliar culture, to name just a few). Regardless of how big or small that comfort zone you leave is, you’ll always remember the people by your side, experiencing similar thoughts, feelings, and sights that you are.

To learn more about my experiences and a broader list of unexpected experiences that later occur, continue to follow my blog as I document my study abroad experience! Thanks for reading, and cheers, love!


Location: Outer Banks, North Carolina

From my Sevillian home to yours

Hi all!

Whether you’re a newcomer to this blog, a member of my family, or a friend, I thank you for joining me on the first of many installments to this Geoblog.  You’ve caught me during a week of frantic packing, obsessively translating everything that I read from English to Spanish, and convincing myself that this trip is actually happening.  My thoughts here are more scattered than I would have liked, but hopefully they will give you a taste of this crazy, overwhelming experience that I am about to have.  (Maybe I’m just crazy.  But you can decide for yourself.)

For those who don’t know me, my name is Anna Lombardo and I study English at Penn State University, where I am also pursuing a minor in business.  This spring I will be participating in a CIEE study abroad program called International Business and Culture, in Seville, Spain, where I will be taking business classes as well as some yet undecided culture courses.  I chose this program for a few different reasons.  First, and most importantly, it will be warm.  If you go to Penn State or ever went to Penn State, you know that the winter (we all know I mean November through April) is abhorrent.  Abhorrent: that is the best word I can think of to describe the bitterly cold and snow-heavy months during which the majority of Penn State classes take place.  I like to tell people that I am never emotionally prepared for the upcoming cold season and it is always true.  So I anticipate that a semester in the south of Spain will be an emotional healing of sorts.

While I am not joking about the alluring warmth of Seville, there are other factors that had a greater influence on my decision to study there than just the climate.  For one thing, it will give me the opportunity to make some real progress on my business minor.  I also hope it will allow me to become close to fluent in Spanish, despite my three-year hiatus from the language (regretfully, I have not taken Spanish classes since high school).  And, of course, I could not pass up the opportunity to spend four months in one of the most gorgeous and culturally rich cities in the world.  I’m happy to be able to share all of the wonderful experiences I have over there with you, my readers.

All of the awesome things that come with this trip are, unfortunately, accompanied by some sad realities.  In the last day or so I’ve teared up occasionally thinking about some of the things I’ll be missing while I’m away: my family, my friends.  (Those are the big ones.)  I won’t get to be with my sister the night of her senior prom; I won’t get to celebrate my 21st birthday with my friends.  For those of you considering studying abroad someday, I hate to put a damper on the experience before I’ve even left.  It is very difficult to put yourself in a situation that you know will probably be amazing but is unfamiliar and uncomfortable at first.  I hope, by the end of this blog, I will be reporting to you that my time in Spain was well worth the initial discomfort.

I am, despite the melancholy character of the previous paragraph, actually looking forward to going to Seville.  Among some of the highlights I hope to write about: staying with a Sevillian family and eating most of my meals with them; taking a 4-day trip to Morocco; and for all of my food lovers out there, tapas (basically Spanish snacks to the MAX).  You won’t want to miss it, so check back soon (once my jetlag has dissipated)!

 


Location: King of Prussia, Pennsylvania

Farewell, America

Hello there!  My name is Maddison and I’d like to personally thank you for visiting my blog space.  I have a lot of plans in store for my GeoBlog, so I sincerely hope you return to experience Ireland with me each week.  And, just so you know, this will be my last post before I depart for Ireland because I’m leaving a bit early to tour the country with my mother and my aunt before my Dublin orientation begins.

My goal for this blog is to share my experiences and adventures with you, though ideally, it would be great to interact with you in the comments section as well.  I want my readers to gain not only entertainment from my blog, but a sense of culture, fun, and belonging.  It’s a well-known fact that Ireland is considered one of the most hospitable countries in the world, so I want my blog to mirror that welcoming tradition!

Well, I suppose I should introduce myself, as you’re probably wondering who I am and why I chose to start blogging.  First and foremost, my name is Maddison and I’m currently a third-year university honors student who will be studying abroad at The National University of Ireland, Galway during the Spring semester of 2015.  I am double majoring in English and History with an intended double minor in International Studies and Writing.  My hobbies include reading, writing, historical research and interpretation, acting, singing, crocheting, listening to music, archery, watching movies, cooking, genealogical research, riding roller coasters, traveling, and spending time with my family and friends.  But you’ll get to know me better as I post more frequently.

So that’s a bit about me.  But you still may be asking yourself why I chose to study abroad in Ireland.  Well, to me, the answer is simple.  I was raised in an Irish-American Catholic family, so I’ve grown up in an environment that has familiarized me with Irish culture ever since I was old enough to understand what it meant to be Irish-American.  The values, morals, and traditions instilled in me as a child have guided my life in many ways, but now that I am in my early twenties, I am ready to explore and experience Ireland as an adult.  And, if I’m honest, there really isn’t anywhere else I could imagine myself going besides Ireland.  I’ve never been there before, but something inside me already warms to the familiarity of traveling to the place where my family came from.  It’s going to be a very new experience to me, but at the same time, it almost feels like going home.

I can assure you that I will go into more depth about these topics in upcoming posts – this initial post is just my way of saying hello, thank you for taking an interest in my blog, and I hope you’ll join me on my journey.  If you have any questions, feel free to post them in the comments section and I will respond as soon as I am able.  Thanks again for stopping by and I hope to see you back again soon!

Until my next post… farewell, America!

Maddison


Location: State College, Pennsylvania, 16801

A Few Weeks Ago

Our flight out of Amman, Jordan left a little before one o’clock July 25th. It was a relief to finally get on the plane. It seems the closer you get to departure the more you long to finally be home. Yet, the second I stepped on the plane I realized how much I had missed while I was there. Due to the conflict we weren’t allowed our trip to Jerusalem, which in all likelihood would have been the highlight of the trip, at least for me. Then while we were in Jordan, we never saw more than the hotel. I would have loved to explore the city and of course see Petra. I found myself longing for one more day in Akko, the possibility of one last field trip to another place of which I never heard and one more look from the tel out over the Mediterranean.
I have so many stories to tell about my first adventure out of the country. Every moment felt brand new, in some ways it felt like a dream and in others I was reminded of the harsh realities of the world in which we live.  In any case, I have no regrets in my decision to travel to Israel. More importantly and with a firm stance, I have no regrets about becoming an archaeologist. With my first archaeological experience officially over, I can’t help but look forward to the next one. I would love to come back to Akko next year, at the same time I would love to visit Egypt, Peru, Mexico, Jordan once again, and any other place with a historic and ancient past. I have so much more to learn and I am ready and up to the task. I have accomplished much and I hope that this is only the beginning of an exciting, enlightening and adventurous career as an archaeologist and so much more

Location: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

back home! (post trip)

it’s been an amazing trip but I’m ready to get back to living my life. this final week is goodbyes and finalizing things. we finished our project and saw the students one last time (apparently we befriended the socially awkward boys at MUHAS- Jacky was impressed we got them to come out of their shells)


I decided that I want Panera when I get back home. and then will will live on a diet of salad and soup for a while. and cereal! I also want all the white bread and bananas removed from the house 🙂 I have eaten far too many

Overall I’ve learned a lot about myself, it was the best thing I could have done with my summer

Location: State College, USA

Trial by Fire

Hello, my name is Russell Faber and I attend(ed) the PSU Altoona branch campus. I am a senior in the EMET program with a minor in German and in September of this year I will be moving to Germany.  The plan is to spend two semesters in Freiburg and hopefully master a language during the process.  I opted to try the Geoblog while away as a way to keep my thoughts and experiences together and also as a way to show off to friends and family.  This is only the first post of I think 36 – I have forgotten what the total demanded amount of posts is.  Come Fall and my departure for Germany, posts should start appearing more sporadically.  Enjoy!


Location: Office Desk, PA

Two week mark

Yesterday marked two weeks since landing in Leeds and beginning my study abroad adventure. My initial reaction remains that Leeds is similar to America in some ways, but also extremely different. Fashion-wise, I have yet to see a student not look completely put-together in class or on weekends. I’m not entirely sure you can even purchase sweatpants here. But then there are also trends present here that are not present at home, and it should stay that way. For example, the “scrunchie” is ever-present here and with every one I see I am reminded of my wardrobe circa second grade. 
But besides that, the culture here is very fun. And, of course, being legally allowed to drink helps that. However, I have yet to discover how to do laundry here or how to print (I’ll keep you posted on that progress). Eating here is growing annoying. I am lucky enough to have a meal plan, but it has a monetary limit that runs out daily, so if you don’t spend the full amount every day, it doesn’t roll over to the next day, which I feel like is a waste. And, the hours are odd, i.e. if I want food from the Refectory (dining commons) between 11:30 a.m. and 2 p.m., I have to pay with cash, my plan doesn’t work. But, I’m adjusting.
Last weekend, I went to Liverpool with the “global” program here. It was only a day trip, but it was really cool to see a different city, especially one that is home to the Beatles. We went to the Liverpool Cathedral, where the nicest man, seeing that we were American, gave us a tour of the lesser-known areas of the building.  Not only did the cathedral have great architectural beauty, but we learned that Paul McCartney got denied from singing in the choir there and that they had a statue honoring Frederick Stanley, who not only was involved with the cathedral, but also originated the Stanley Cup.
Liverpool Cathedral
While in Liverpool we also explored the museums and went to the Beatles Story, a museum documenting the rise of the Beatles. It was all very interesting, but my favorite part was when we went to The Cavern, a Liverpool pub where the Beatles first started out. Having grown up to the sounds of the group, it was enlightening and humbling for me. The Cavern was a really cool place, where a performer was playing cover songs to a packed house when we walked in and all I could think about was being there 50 or so years ago, seeing the Beatles and feeling like they were going to be something big – imagine, literal history in the making.
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As for my time at Leeds, I’m finally beginning to feel settled in – though I did get lost for the first time on Monday when I went to set up a UK cellphone. Having walked through Leeds City Centre multiple times at that point, I thought I was fine to find the shop by memory. Nope. I got lost and I ended up going shopping for clothing instead. I’ve since ventured out again and found the store, which was an adventure in itself. The man at the store tried to tell me that I needed to buy a whole new phone and pay a fairly high price to maintain a pay-as-you-go plan. I ended up leaving and going to another store, where I got a way better deal. Sometimes I feel like employees at stores can tell as soon as I speak that I am American, and thus they try to sell me things at higher costs, because they think I don’t know the difference.  
This week, I took the bus again and only got slightly less lost than the lost time I did. (yay, progress!) I really don’t get how fellow riders know when it’s their stop. There is no voice telling you the next stop, or flashing marquee like on the White Loop. This week, we also went to a nightclub that used to be a church, which was interesting. It was extremely crowded and played awful music, but being able to say that I was there is a story in itself. A bunch of us here also discovered that we love The Library, which is a pub off campus. We watched the Super Bowl there on Sunday, though it was definitely not the American experience I was used to. Not only did I know more about football than the people around me (as most were not American), but also the commercials shown here are not the same as the ones shown in America, and they are always the best part of the Super Bowl. Also, the announcers were British for the broadcast, which was weird, too.
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Besides that, classes this week were really interesting. I finally started my seminars, which are basically when your lecture module is broken into smaller groups and you meet at another point during the week to discuss topics more informally. In my Reporting of Politics it was a bit scary as my professor went around asking us questions about passing policy in Parliament – something I know little to nothing about. It is a bit nerve-wracking being expected to know about another political culture than my own, but I was surprised by how much the other British students did not know as well. The English girl next to me even said that she studied American politics more and knew a lot more about it than British politics. Nonetheless, it’s an interesting system, and next week our class is devoted to the Royal Family, so that should be interesting.
For my museum studies class we went to the Leeds City Museum instead of going to class, which was cool. The museum is small, but the exhibits featured, not only the history of Leeds (including recent things like the Leeds Festival), but also nature-oriented exhibits.
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Today, I went to my Eighteenth Century Literature lecture and then seminar. The seminar has six other students beside myself, and we met for discussion in my professor’s office. It was a different environment than I’m used to, though Penn State does have relatively small English class sizes, but I liked it. It forced me to talk and I can tell it’s going to be a really active seminar for the rest of the semester.  
Tonight, I’m going to London with some friends for the weekend. It should be fun, but I really should pack, since we are leaving in about an hour (!!!).
Cheers (as they say here),
Kelsey 

Location: University of Leeds

Still in New York…

The next time I take a class at Penn State I will be a senior. A SENIOR.

This realization scares me. In a year I will be looking for a job… not just a job, a career.

Well before I go on a rampage, let me introduce myself.

My name is Lucie Victoria Couillard. But since I am going to Germany. Ich heie Lucie. Ich komme aus Westchester, New York.

I am a New Yorker. I am turning 21 on March 5 therefore I am a Pisces. My major is Print journalism and I have minors in anthropology and international studies. My dream would be to write for National Geographic but I am not opposed to working other places and expect it will take a very long while for me to work my way up to National Geographic.

I decided to study abroad because I want to see the world and see how other people live. Although I am excited to see amazing, interesting things that only Europe can offer, I really want to see how an average German person’s life is different from mine but also notice the similarities.

Having what my parents call “the travel bug,” I have always taken opportunities to go places but the most I have been truly away from home is two months and this was because I was at school in Pennsylvania.

This past two weeks I have been in Honduras and by the 12th day I was ready to go home. I had an amazing time and can’t wait to return but I was homesick.

This frightened me. How can I be homesick after 12 days when I will be in Germany for four months with no way to return home.

On February 23 I will be flying out of JFK airport with one other Penn Stater to spend my semester in Germany. I will be attending Philipps University in Marburg where the Brothers Grimm went to school. Apparently it is a small, beautiful college town.

Honestly right now the trip seems still very far away and very unreal. I still have a lot to do to prepare and I am having somewhat of a packing dilemma.

Since I don’t leave for a while, I will be bouncing around between Penn State and visiting friends and family. Feel welcome to keep up with my blog, I’ll probably be posting pictures and posts about my life pre-trip including fun photos from Honduras and newly learned packing tips. But the true travel blog will start February 24 after a long plane ride.

 Cheers,

 Lucie


Location: Armonk, New York, USA

Shalom!

Safe and sound in Tel Aviv at last! I got off the plane only this morning. I honestly didn’t sleep much during the trip, so right now, I’m pretty exhausted!

I did not get to write a pre-departure entry, so here I am to talk about my expectations (before the flight) and some of what I’ve experienced so far! My trip was booked on El Al Airlines with a huge group of about 100 students from schools all over. From what I understand, El Al is the world’s best airline. They use very different security tactics for their passengers. I was asked a lot of “different” questions by El Al. They were about my reasons for studying abroad in Israel, my current living situation at home, etc. They repeated a lot, I guess to make sure my story was straight. However, my flight experience didn’t stop at their first checkpoint, no siree! I was given the full, entire flight experience. No stone left unturned! For whatever reason (I was later told it was done randomly), I had to go through an even more thorough security check. (I read about this online a few weeks before – apparently, a passenger’s luggage is tagged from 1-5, by order of… suspicious-ness, I guess O_O.) I was given a whopping number 5. So absolutely *everything *in my two bags was checked, and I was taken to a room to be scanned myself. When they finished, I was personally escorted to an available seat in the waiting area, and come boarding time, almost to the plane itself. It was awkward because no one else had a cool “body guard” like me (haha), but he was very nice and answered a lot of the questions I had about the plane and about Israel. He even offered his discount when I bought myself a juice! I think it all turned out for the best in the end.

It’s a little hard to explain how I feel right now (besides sleepy). The day before the flight, I felt my first sudden pang of homesickness… but it passed, and now I feel really good here! Since the moment I stepped into the plane, and even more so when we landed at the Ben Gurion airport, I felt like I’ve been doing this all my life. I honestly feel so comfortable here, like I went back ho me instead of just left it. So, it seems Israel and I are off to a great start!

I’m feeling really tired now, so I leave you with some pretty pictures of the BEAUTIFUL weather we had today in Tel Aviv!

100_2234.JPG P.S. In the next few days, I’ll write all about ULPAN, my dorm, the university, and everything. Stay tuned! 😛


Location: Tel Aviv-Yafo, Israel