Tag Archives: Before leaving

I leave tomorrow!

First I have to say THON on to everyone at PSU! <3 FTK

It’s the day my flight and by now I have gone from nervous to just sheer anticipation. I just want to get there already and start meeting people and exploring the island. Many of my friends back in State College have been asking me how I feel and right about now I just want to be on that plane now! Today will be spent with my family, a classic dinner and family games farewell and I’m rather looking forward to it just so we will all be together.

Besides all that the biggest thing I’m dealing with right now is packing. I have tried really hard to get nearly everything to fit into the suggested one suitcase and ladies and gentlemen that did not happen. I ended up with 2 suitcases, 1 backpack and 1 carry on. I’d tried really hard to get everything to fit in one suitcase but then my mom reminded me of a few things I forgot and I ended up needing another. Nevertheless, I did get a few helpful tips from my family that did help save space. One is to put underthings and tank tops in zip lock bags, push the air out of them and then seal them. This makes them really flat so thus they take up less space. Like a space bag. The second helpful little tip for space saving is to roll shirts and pants (kinda like a hot dog.)

So my plane takes off around noon this Sunday and I will be there Tuesday our time but Wednesday there time (if I have that right.) What I really love is that the school sends a car to come pick me up at the airport so I won’t have to lug around my bags. I have no idea who my roommate is or when she will be getting to school so I’m pretty nervous about that too. To be honest I hope she’s a native so I can have my own guide but if she’s not then we can be lost together. Which reminds me of another really useful thing that the school does, there will be several mixers taking place for study abroad students to meet other study abroaders, advisers and natives that are willing to be our friends and help us out.

This brings me to the drinking age in New Zealand and how more relaxed the atmosphere around alcohol is in other countries. The drinking age for those who don’t know is 18 and they will actually be serving beer and wine at these school run functions. As someone who studies sociology I’m quite interested to see the dynamic of the room and how it will function with alcohol present.

I also wanted to mention how small this planet is! In doing this study abroad I have discovered that one LTC back at Penn State has a lifelong friend from the military that has lived in Christchurch for over a decade and he helped me contact him so I have someone to turn to if I need any help. I also learned that my next door neighbor’s wife was actually born and raised in Christchurch and that’s where they met. They go back there once a year and will be heading there the day after I leave. They offered to show me around a bit so that will be nice as well.

Lastly a word to travelers, I have recently learned that everything that can go wrong before the trip will and you will always feel like you have forgotten something. So far I’ve managed to have to deal with getting a flat tire and having to replace all my tires and my phone breaking last night (perfect timing.) And of course I will always feel like I’m missing something but as long as I have my passport I can get into the country and then buy whatever I’m missing.

But I digress. Hopefully I will have plenty to post about when I am finally in country and will have plenty of pictures.

Until next time my friends

Photo02121602.jpg6.JPG


Location: Fairfax Station, VA

Language Intensive…? @_@

OK, so I’m officially freaking out because apparently, the Beijing Language Intensive Program is mad intense.  I had to take a language pledge that said I’ll only speak Chinese during my time in China, with few exceptions.  This is crazy!  I only took 3 semesters of Chinese… As far as I’m concerned I only know how to say nihao and xiexie.  

So I talked to John Cho about it and all he had to say was:
“Suck it up. it’s really not that bad and it’s the main reason why you will improve so much. surround yourself with chinese speakers as much as u can and don’t be afraid to practice with random people you meet like taxi drivers and people at the mart. keep an open mind, remember to love others and not look down on others reasons for being there. you’ll be fine danny, i’d be surprised if you didn’t adjust well”

Sounds like tough love.. haha.  But its reassuring.  I’ll be fine.  No one didn’t like their experience abroad; I won’t be the first.  I’ll learn a lot and explore a lot and grow in lots of different ways.  T minus two days.  Lets get packing!  

Till next time,
Dannie


Location: Upper Dublin (home), PA

Just 5 more weeks

Hi my name is Dannie and I’ll be going to Beijing, China during the spring semester of 2011.  I’m going primarily to improve my Chinese, but also to get a full China experience. 

People always ask me “are you excited to go”.  Strangely enough, the answer is always “no, it hasn’t quite hit me yet”.  And I reckon it won’t until i step out of Beijing National Airport on January 15th.  I guess a main reason why it hasn’t hit me is because this semester was so hectic.  On top of all the school work, the entire application process for studying abroad was quiet cumbersome.  Applying for scholarships was also pretty taxing.  But now that mostly everything has fallen into place, all my forms are in order, my plane ticket has been purchased, and I have selected my courses.. yeah, I’m a looking forward to it. 

What is your biggest deterrent for studying abroad?  Mine was probably cost.  In terms of credits, I came in with enough to graduate on time; I’m taking mostly electives abroad but I don’t mind.  I want to step out of my comfort zone and explore a grand world we live in, so that wasn’t the issue either.  But even the biggest reason against going to China has been resolved!  Praise God, I’m essentially going abroad for free, after all the generous scholarships I have been awarded.  For anyone seriously interested in studying abroad, I believe that this could be a possibility to you, so give me a shout out if you want to learn more about the Whole World Scholarship or the Gilman Scholarship. 

Isaac Newton was a famous physicist and mathematician.  However, despite his accomplishments and discoveries, he humbly says, “If I have seen further than others, it is because I stood on the shoulders of giants”. And in a lot of ways, I feel the same way too.  I feel as though despite my own reasons for doing things and for having goals, a lot of it was derived from people who I look up to.  As much as I want to take ownership of the Language Intensive Program at Beijing, it was John Cho who influenced me to do it.  Rediscovery.  Validity for something I think is not mine.  I couldn’t quite find it here, maybe I’ll find it elsewhere. 

Till next time,
Dannie Kim


Location: State College, Pennsylvania

Of working in factories and other things

It’s a week before I head to Argentina, and I’m nowhere near ready.

I’ve procrastinated the preparations all summer long, so over the past week and a half it’s been a game of catching up – rushing to get vaccinated, calling relatives, booking hostel reservations, etc.

I think I’ve ignored the trip for so long because life in general has been moving especially fast recently. I needed to take a breather for a minute, and I wish things would just slow down while I catch my bearings. Like a lot of people, I’m not sure I know what I want anymore.

This summer, I worked full time at a factory, Hayward Laboratories, producing Palmer brand cocoa butter beauty products. I’ve shoved things in boxes, over and over again, and put caps on bottles, monotonously, for eight hours every weekday for the past two months, all to buy a Canon Rebel T2i camera for the trip. I also wanted to know what it was like to work a “real job” as opposed to silly part times at Dunkin’ Donuts, etc.

The work takes place in a dismal, squat building built in the 1800’s where none of the machines work properly and the concrete floor is caked with decades’ worth of grime. I knelt down to pick a bottle off the floor once and my pant leg was smeared black. There’s no air conditioning, so on hot days, it gets to be more than 100 degrees inside.

It sounds horrible, but it’s an easy job. The lines come fast sometimes, but really the hardest part is fighting sleepiness.

In the short time I’ve been there, though, I’ve seen lots of people filter in and out of the company. Most people don’t last more than a day. It can be “soul crushing,” as my one friend who used to work there says. I’ve had two mild nightmares about being trapped on an endless assembly line and even woke up once saying, “Wait, I’m not at work – I don’t have to do this crap.”

How this ties in is that, on this job, I’ve had time to think. A lot. And while we do have conversations with each other on the line, for most of the day the workers fall into silence. So I’ve been stuck with myself, rethinking my life and all the major decisions I’ve ever made over and over again.

This is hard to put concretely, and I’ll be coming back to this, but I’m hoping to find some direction in Argentina, whatever that means. Somewhere in the back of my head I’ve thought that I might prefer to stay working at Hayward for a while, giving me more time to figure things out. I’ve even thought that I might decide to stay in South America.

Funnily enough, most of the workers at Hayward actually happen to be Spanish-speaking immigrants. I’ve met people from El Salvador, Peru, Guatemala, Mexico and Columbia, most of which came to the United States looking for the clich�d “better life.” One guy, a supposed chef, even moved here because he was bored with his life in Puerto Rico and he just wanted to get away.

milhouse-edited.jpg

So far, the plan is this: I’ll be leaving on Thursday, July 29, getting there two days before the program starts. My uncle, Tio Rico, who’s lived in Argentina for most of his life and I only met once when I was very young, will pick me up from the airport and drive me to a party hostel at Milhouse Avenue.

On November 26, I leave for Peru, where I will be staying with family, visiting Machu Picchu, the rainforest, Lake Titicaca, etc. I plan to stay there through New Year’s.

After that, who knows?

One thing in particular has been getting me through these days, and it’s listening to this musician, Manu Chao, who is one of the world’s most popular artists but we hear almost nothing of in the States. He sings in six languages and his lyrics really speak to me – more on that later. For now, here he is serenading Diego Maradona, one of the best Argentine football players of all time:


Location: East Stroudsburg, PA

Finishing the Semester

profilepic.jpg

hello!

i’m finishing up the spring 2010 semester here at Penn State, University Park and getting ready to head abroad to Puebla, Mexico this summer.  i’m really excited about my trip, and about studying in such a beautiful country.  i’ve never been to mexico before either, so i’m sure i’ll be learning all kinds of new things every day.

i’m a junior film-video major here at UP, so i’m hoping to take at least a still camera to capture some of the sights in all of the various locations i’ll be visiting.  in addition to living in Puebla and attending a local university there, i’ll also be going on alot of field trips to a variety of culture sites and cities in Mexico, and i’m excited to share my experiences of those too.

for now though, i’m really focused on finishing up the spring semester here and getting packed for Mexico (especially since i’m going on a roadtrip to Providence, RI next weekend before i leave!)

can’t wait to come back here and keep you all updated about my progress!!  🙂


Location: University Park, Pennsylvania, 16802, United States