Saturday, May 23, 2009

Fotos

One week left. I'm not sure what I want to say to conclude this blog yet so this is a photo post of my favorite memories/pictures, not based on quality of photo or anything like that, but just the ones I happen to personally like. Some are new, some have been on the blog before. Some are stolen pictures, just like my camera as of late April, from Amanda or Jessica. May I suggest you play a fun game trying to guess where each picture is from? They aren't in order.




































Sunday, May 17, 2009

Senderísmo

So, it's been a while. After I got back from Copenhagen, I took my grammar exams and passed each of them! That weekend, I went hiking outside of Madrid with Amanda, Jessica, and Travis. We took the train for an hour, then arrived in a little town. We had to walk all the way through the town to get to the park, and then the trail was this old Roman road. Unfortunately for the Romans and for us, the road lead directly up the steep mountain. As I possess little to no leg muscles, it was a difficult climb for me, but the beautiful scenery made up for it. When we got to the top of the mountain, there were still patches of snow! Crazy!







The program took us on our last trip together also. This one was just a day trip, not an overnight or anything. They took us up north a bit, to a few cities so small that no one's host parents had heard of them. We saw Roman ruins, so obviously I was really excited. The Romans were really smart, and took advantage of the landscape to build the houses in this area, because there were a lot of rocky cliff type things, so the Romans just carved out of the rock and built mud structures coming out. On top of one cliff, we saw the floorplan and foundation for what is said to be the biggest Roman house in Spain, and it was pretty big, probably the size of the ground floor of my house in Clinton. All of it reminded me of the Southwest and pueblos and stuff. There was wild thyme growing everywhere, and the sun was heating it up and we were walking all over it so the whole place smelled delicious. We got to walk through an aquaduct that had been carved through rock, like a tunnel. It was pretty scary because at points there was literally no light and everyone was blind. And we ate a delicious lunch, and went to the largest fortress in Europe that is like a mile long or something. The landscape was so beautiful, a patchwork of different colored fields as far as you could see. I was glad to go, especially because it's really nice to have the whole program together! It seems to never really happen anymore, and there are people I really like but just don't see all that often. Also, I'm going to miss living in a place where Roman ruins are so common. Europe is awesome for that.

The Mansion:


House?
Fortress


Besides that, my life has been pretty scholastic. I had my poetry presentation last week, on Tuesday. I wrote out everything that I was going to say, like a script, and just read from my paper. We, the Americans in my class, all decided that it would be okay for us to do that, instead of standing up there and winging it like some of the overachieving Spanish kids. My presentation was a little rough, I was really nervous and had some problems pronouncing the words I was reading. Especially since my poet was all crazy into alliteration! Here is an example:

¡Tengo tantas tonterías! …
tentempiés, tímpanos, témpanos,
tengo tinta, teterillas,
tengo pompanos y púrpuras

Admittedly pretty cool, but hard to read when you are a nervous American.

Currently on my plate is my art history paper. I changed my work to Picasso's portrait of Gertrude Stein because I wasn't finding any information on the Miró I wanted to do originally. I'm slowly trudging through researching and writing. I think tomorrow I'm going to the Reina Sofia library to see if there are any books on it.

I'm trying to balance having a lot of work with enjoying my last weeks here. Thursday night some kids from the Paris program came to visit, and we hung out in their hotel room for a while and then went out to a discoteca. I didn't end up getting home until 5:30 in the morning! Probably only the second time that I've done that my whole semester, but it's so normal for the Spanish kids to do it. I don't understand how they can do that every weekend! Then, the day after Jessica and I went exploring in the middle of the city. We walked all around La Latina, Sol, and Tirso de Molina area. Jessica had randomly run into this guy that is friends with her boyfriend at Bard on the metro the day before, so we met up with him and showed him around. We had chocolate y churros, and then went to the Retiro and rented a paddle boat! It was really fun and really cheap, only 4 euros for all of us. Then we walked down to the Reina Sofia, and parted ways with him. By this point, Jessica and I had been walking around for 6 hours and decided it would be a good idea to go home for dinner. He was really nice, and i love doing the touristy things that we never get to do otherwise.

Today, I finally met my host dad's son. I had met his daughter before, but both of them came over because it was his birthday yesterday/today? No one actually told me specifically that it was his birthday, but I figured it out. He got the speakers that I have for a present, so we both thought that was pretty cool. His daughter brought over their dog, but Luisa FREAKED out because she is scared of dogs, even though this dog was a tiny little thing. So the daughter had to drive it back home haha. And so here I am.. my art history paper is so strange. It's just different categories that we have to answer, not one coherent paper. We have to number and letter each section, and they don't flow very well. Ugh. Well..

Friday, May 1, 2009

Ambicioso

so, thank you to everyone that wished me a happy birthday! it was indeed happy. unfortunately to those who did not know, my whole purse was stolen last thursday night, so that SUCKED but the next day i flew off to copenhagen with my intact passport and some euros i had laying around my room and had a blast celebrating my birthday. i went with my always traveling partner amanda and we stayed with one of her friends from skidmore. he lives in an apartment with other students and it was really nice to be able to hang out in a house with people again, because in spanish culture you don't really hang out with people in your house. we were not the best tourists and started our days kind of late, but we managed to see a good deal of the city. i met up with one of my skidmore friends, and then also friends from home and it was really nice to see old familiar faces! also, we ate at wagamama and that was exciting. copenhagen is a really beautiful city, really quaint and accessible. we took a really neat canal tour that led us around the city by boat and we saw the new opera house and went through the canal with all the house boats and with the apartments with large balconies overlooking the water (very pricey, i imagine) and we saw the little mermaid statue. and we went to christiania, which is this crazy place that is like a commune or something. you walk through this gate and basically walk out of copenhagen and into somewhere completely different. it's overrun by bushes and flowers and old military buildings that people live in now, and everyone is selling joints on picnic tables and there are little dirt paths everywhere and trails along a lake. it was really neat to see.
now, i am back in madrid, probably for good. i have two exams for grammar class next week along with a presentation for my english class. the week after, i have to do a 20 minute presentation on my spanish poet. the week after i have the 10 page paper on my spanish poet due as well as my 10 page art history paper on "harlequin's carnvial" by miró due. then, i have my 11 page paper on british feminism in the 1960's due the 28th. THEN i go home! it seems like time will fly by. but yuck, so much work.

here are lists i have been making if anyone is curious about my deepest desires.

Books I Want to Read Over the Summer

• Nimrod Flipout by Etgar Keret
• The Road by Cormac McCarthy
• Under the Banner of Heaven by Jon Krakauer
• I Was Told There Would Be Cake by Sloane Crosley
• Don Quixote de la Mancha by Miguel de Cervantes
• The New Kings of Non-Fiction edited by Ira Glass
• The Blind Assassin by Margaret Atwood
• The Wordy Shipmates by Sarah Vowell
• The Devil in the White City: Murder, Magic, and Madness at the Fair that Changed America by Eric Larsen
• Or Perish in the Attempt: Wilderness Medicine in the Lewis and Clark Expedition by David J. Peck
• The Coming Plague: Newly Emerging Diseases in a World Out of Balance by Laurie Garrett
• More Information Than You Require by John Hodgman
• The Stuff of Thought: Language as a Window into Human Nature by Steven Pinker
• Sin in the Second City: Madams, Ministers, Playboys, and the Battle for America's Soul by Karen Abbott
• Foreskin’s Lament by Shalom Auslander
• London Fields by Martin Amis
• Hardboiled Wonderland and the End of the World by Haruki Murakami
• Invitation to a Beheading by Vladimir Nabokov
• Stiff by Mary Roach
• My Mistresses Sparrow is Dead edited by Jeffrey Eugenides
• The Bus Driver Who Wanted to be God and Other Stories by Etgar Keret


AND Food I Want to Eat When I Get Home

Pancakes, waffles, bacon, scrambled eggs with cheese, cheeseburgers, egg rolls, quesadillas, tamales, enchiladas, burritos, lo mein, ramen noodles, grilled cheese, Greek yogurt with honey, tea with honey, chicken noodle soup, chocolate chip cookies, birthday cake, chips and salsa, potato and leek soup, stir fry, grilled sausages, grilled vegetables, lasagne, pasta with pesto, pasta with tomato sauce, crepes, peaches, Doritos, blueberries, tacos, guacamole, cupcakes, Midnight cookies, raspberries, chili, cinnamon buns, French toast, meatballs, green beans, mashed potatoes, macaroni and cheese, pigs in a blanket, garlic bread, bagels with cream cheese, nachos, Wheat Thins, onion rings, barbeque sauce, chicken nuggets, grilled shrimp, New Haven style pizza, broccoli, cauliflower, corn on the cob, pickles.


in other news, i come home in four weeks.