Friday, April 23, 2010

Mallorcan Relaxation, Feria, and Birthday Shenanigans




Hi! A couple of days ago I got back from a fabulous six day Mallorcan relaxation vacation. Mallorca is one of the Baleric Islands in the Mediterranean that belong to Spain. We actually got really lucky because we were staying in Spain (and Spain is Southern Europe, of course) and our flight was not affected by the ash cloud from the Icelandic volcano! We did see a ton of people waiting in line for refunds and flight changes. A lot of my friends' plans were adversely affected by the ash cloud seeing as they were going to places like Bulgaria and Germany and such. But we got to Mallorca A-ok and traveled from the airport in Palma to Port de Pollença on the other side of the island, checked into our modest hostel, and hit the beach. It was incredibly beautiful. The sand was so soft and white, and the water was SO clear. There were no waves either. Completely bizarre to me, but so awesome. Mary, Arianna, and I literally did nothing for six days but lay on the beach, swim in the water, and chill in our room. It was bliss. Just what the doctor ordered. Its funny, because at school you can tell that everyone is getting worn out from travel and work, its like we are running out of batteries...all at the same time. As unfortunate as it is, we all still have final papers and presentations to do before its over, and let me tell you 5-10 page papers in spanish is no walk in the park.

But Mallorca was really great and we got to come back to Feria in full swing. Feria is incredible! Imagine every color flamenco dress imaginable, and multiply it by styles, prints, colors, flowers, and ruffles, and increase exponentially by a million, and you have a teeny understanding of all the colors and fabulous dresses of the women, the men dressed in riding gear and suits, casetas (tents) lining the streets, and if you are lucky enough to know people you can get into one, drinking and dancing. THEN on top of all these festivities, there is an amusement park attached. Imagine State Fair rides and multiply your mental image by about 100. Not kidding. It is amazing. And the people are there 24 hours a day for seven days. It doesnt matter what time you get there, its the same, 12 noon, 7 pm, 1 am, 4 am, 9 am... the same. and little kids! everywhere, at all hours. it is incredible. It is also really fun to dress up in our flamenco dresses and feel a part of the crowd.

Sunday is my 21st birthday and we plan to go to feria for part of the day and stay and see the closing ceremony which includes fireworks! other than that, who knows? :-)

12 days of class left
23 days till Abby gets here
25 days until my last exam is over
26 days until Dane gets here

less than a month left....where did these past three months go???

besos

Friday, April 9, 2010

Plane billetes, final ensayos, y tutoring





Hola a todos!
Nothing huge has really happened since my last blog other than the end of my Barcelona trip, and that was SO fun. Park Güell was super cool, and really really awesome, and the outside of the Sagrada Familia was beyond words. Arianna's parents got here safe and sound and we headed to Sitges on the train. Sitges as it turns out is a little tiny town just to the South of Barcelona right on the coast. The parents had rented an apartment there (from a Nike exec. no less - just an old friend of the family...jeez), and Mary and I were able to stay with them for free for a night before the two of us headed home and let the fam have some time together. It was so relaxing and nice. Mary and I headed home and the next day we went to a mercado to do an observation for one of our classes and then headed to the center of town to catch a glimpse of some paseos for Semana Santa, they really are quite beautiful and the live music is really amazing. BUT I have NEVER seen so many people in Seville, it was bonkers.

Anyway, the girls and I are headed to Mallorca next week for some chill beach time before Feria de Abril arrives. And Abby has officially gotten her ticket to come visit me!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I am SUPER excited! We are entering into the last few weeks of school here and the work load is getting heavier. I have several final papers that need to be started and finished, on top of my regular homework load...phew! Also, I think I have forgotten to mention it before, but I am tutoring a guy twice a week in English! It is turning out to be a really great job, and he is learning a lot, and so am I.

Countdowns:
Days of Class left: 16
Days until Abby Gets here: 37
Days until Dane Gets here: 40

It's bittersweet that the end is so close!
xoxo

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Camels, Survival, Black Beaches, and Gaudi






Hiya folks. Sorry it takes me so long to update these days. Anywho. Last time I blogged I was preparing for my weekend trip to Morocco. Yes, Morocco as in Africa. WOWOWOW i know. It was a really cool trip. A totally, completely new experience. The culture was so different. i mean SO different. Everyone there speaks at least three languages: Arabic, French, and Spanish and a ton of them speak English as well. That just blows my mind. completely. We rode camels and bargained with street vendors and drank delicious moroccan tea. Then it was back to school for one more midterm and three more days of class until Semana Santa break. (Semana Santa is the week before Easter..holy week)

I PASSED ALL MY MIDTERMS!!!!! yess. so excited. And then Wednesday night I crashed at Arianna's place to prepare for an early morning trip to the airport. We began our excursion to the Greek Island of Santorini at four thirty in the morning Seville time. Following that was the flight from Sevilla to Barcelona, then a couple hours in the airport, then the three and a half hour flight from Barcelona to Athens, then an hour bus ride from the airport to the port (for the ferry) and then another bus and some walking to our AWESOME huge amazing ferry. Then a five hour ferry ride...a really altogether pleasant experience...then a little van ride to our hostel on the other side of the island...and at one am we had arrived! We woke up at a reasonable hour, headed to the little mini mart two blocks away for some groceries (and when i say mini, i mean MINI) and then we headed to the GOREGOUS Perissa beach. Perissa, by the way, is famous for its black sand. Yes, i said black. It was sooooo cool, the sand didnt stick to anything! it was like little pebbles. Best invention ever, thanks God. And thanks to the active volcano on the island! four days of complete bliss on the beach and in our hostel - which by the way was really a villa masquerading as a hostel: three rooms and a bathroom a balcony and a kitchenette all to ourselves. not to mention that everyday a maid service came in and changed our sheets AND did our dishes for ten euro a night. i know, wow. one of the days we woke up bright and early and rented two ATVs (four wheelers) for the three of us and drove all over the island: to Fira (the capital) and to Oia (the famous sunset place) and had a BLAST. we swam in the mediterranean and bathed in saltwater (no fresh water on the island) and got a suntan. amazing. it was incredibly beautiful. Then at the end we flew to athens early in the morning our last day, spent the whole day touring athens and seeing ruins and eating gyros (souvlaki), and then headed back to the airport for a flight to Barcelona.

Barcelona! that's where i am currently with Mary and Arianna (the three traveling musketeers) and we are here for two more days, Arianna's padres arrive in Barcelona tomorrow and they are gonna be in Spain for a week! Today we walked around the gothic quarter, had some comfort food at Hard Rock (where they spoke english to us YAY) and where we all ordered mixed drinks...well, frankly, just cause we could, saw the cathedral, and toured the Picasso Museum. Tomorrow we are going to Guell Park (a park full of Gaudi creations) and the Sagrada familia before heading to the airport to pick up arianna's fam. :-) what an exciting life i lead....SO BLESSED.

xoxo

Friday, March 19, 2010

Rota + the Beach, Aracena + the mountains, and Midterms






Time continues to fly as I progress through the semester here. I can hardly believe that March is over halfway done! I do miss home, but I am having an absolute blast in Europe, I am traveling as much as I can, and trying to experience all that I am able to in this short time. Last weekend my friends Lisa, Lauren, Mary, Arianna, and I went to Rota for the beach for the day. Rota is where the American Military base is and it was a beautiful beach location. Yes it was around 65 degrees Fahrenheit and we were laying out in our bikinis. We'd been living in a clouded depression zone for a month! And to us Americans, 65 is WARM. Of course all the Spaniards there looked at us like we were absolutely nuts and you could basically hear them saying "stupid, crazy Americans." we had a blast though, and scoffed at them in their coats and scarves. These people dont know warm when it hits them! haha of course I suppose they have a right to when it gets over a hundred easily in the summers here. We all got a little sun and went home that night full of Vitamin D and happy warmth.

The next morning Mary and I met up with a large group of kids from our school (exchange and non exchange) and went on a trip to Aracena in the Mountains in the provice of Huelva next to us. It was incredibly beautiful. It was amazing to see how much the landscape changed with just an hour of driving. Aracena is completely rural and totally surrounded by mountains. There is a huge castle (ruins) on the top of their highest peak, and they are surrounded by miles and miles (or should i say kilometers and kilometers) of nationally preserved land. We parked the bus and went on a two and a half hour hike through the goregous mountains. The weather was absolutely perfect and I felt right at home. Although we were all huffing and puffing cause Sevilla is so flat comparatively, it was exhilarating, and great exercise. We then toured around the town and saw all the museums and stuff. Aracena is apparently quite famous for their Jamón (ham). ok Jamón is a Spanish specialty, and NOTHING like spiral cut ham at home, bacon, or country ham, or deli ham. It is unlike everything i've ever had. and it is AMAZING. and Aracena ham? yeah, there's definitely a reason for it being famous. it was super delicious. Also, another cool thing about Aracena is that underneath the city, there is a whole system of underground caves/caverns. you know the things with underground lakes and stalactites, and stalagmites?? yeah they were awesome too!

last week and this week we had midterms. ugh. They were not so bad, but i still have yet to receive my grades. so far i have gotten a 9 on one (A-) and a 7 on the other (B-), not so bad considering one was grammar and the other was culture and civ. And culture and civ happens to be so boring i cannot force myself to pay attention, i think a B- is commendable. :-) haha good Lord, in reality, i am having a minor heart attack, because, to me a B- is like the worst thing in the world. I really need to get a grip. ok. anywho, I am having a blast and in a couple hours I will be well on my way to Morocco for the weekend. horray!!!!!

oh, and by the way, Feria de Abril is coming soon and one needs an awesome flamenco style dress to wear and you have to have one to get in. And, they are like 300+ EURO, ick. But thanks to a friend, we discovered a thrift store with them :-) so guess who has an AWESOME new dress for feria? yes ma'am, that would be me, Katie Madison Shoaf the first :-)

love love love <3

Sunday, March 7, 2010

Irlanda and test preparations







So last weekend Arianna, Mary, and I utilized our five day weekend and took a whirlwind trip to Ireland :-) It was beyond incredibly beautiful there. On Wednesday night we were out at 100 montaditos as per usual and we ended up just staying there until about 11:30 or so, and then we headed back to Mary's place to meet Pepi and Juan (her señora and her señora's boyfriend) because they had offered to drive us to the bus station around midnight (our bus to Madrid left at 1 am). So we get on the bus and look forward to some sleep on the SIX HOUR BUS RIDE. yeah. I am NOT kidding. We doze a little but ultimately the bus is loud, hot, bumpy, and uncomfortable. ugh. Needless to say we got to Madrid at 7am a little grumpy and a lot tired. We had to keep it together though because we would have to get ourselves from the bus station to the airport (hopefully without paying an arm and a leg for a cab). We saw giant signs for the Metro there and I had overheard Lola telling Kiri a couple weeks ago that there was a metro line that runs straight to the airport! hooray...except we had to figure out which of the 20 billion metro lines ran there and how many times we would have to change, what kind of tickets to buy, etc. Thank the Lord for helpful Metro workers. an hour later we were walking into the terminal at Madrid airport. We were a few hours early so we found some comfy looking benches and slept a while. we woke up to a mass exodous from our gate...hmmm. We go to check our screen and find that not only has our flight been delayed THREE HOURS, our gate has moved. anyway, we do get on a plane and land in Dublin safe and sound.

Our hostels in Ireland were amazing. Super nice, clean, helpful, etc. Our schedule in Ireland went as such: night one - Dublin... cheap dinner and bed. day two - Dublin --> Limerick --> Cliffs of Moher --> Doolin -->The Burren --> Dublin (PADDYWAGON TOUR!!!) night two- same hostel in Dublin. day three - Dublin --> Kilkenny (by awesome train)...beautiful day touring the little town. night three - hostel in Kilkenny. day four - Kilkenny --> Dublin (by train again) hangin around Dublin...even though it was FREEZING. night four - head to the airport (we have a 6am flight and are too cheap to pay for a hostel). day five - flight to Madrid, metro to the bus station, bus to Sevilla. I am pretty proud for all the stuff we got to see. Pretty amazing. It was super fun and exhausting.

I have most of my midterms next week so i have been studying (or pretending to study) all weekend long. But last week I did splurge and have all my hair cut off again...in a Spanish salon. it was a small miracle i came out of there with hair still on my head. A little confusing to explain what you want. haha. It was my first time in a salon (love you Mama). I like it lots :-)

love and hugs to you at home!
k

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Alcazar, 21st birthdays, and Carnival




Okie Dokie. so my last update was just before Carnival in Cádiz. Well, It was fun for awhile and then it was the worst night of my life. Drunk people everywhere, trash everywhere, and we had to wait for the nine a.m. bus to go home. ugh. Staying up all night has never been my forte, and it was just miserable. Fortunately, it did not rain, but it was freezing cold. And my roommate, Lisa, managed to get a ticket on the 8 am bus and she traded it with me! how sweet of her. Anyway. We did not sleep at all on Saturday night, and I barely slept on Sunday, and Monday was awful, cause I was just so tired. Kiri (the girl that lived in my room last semester) came on Saturday and was here till Wednesday. She is such a sweetheart too, from Australia.

Monday and Tuesday went by in a blur...but Tuesday I got a Valentine's package from Dane, and a package from Mom. Both were amazing packages. Wednesday morning we woke up super early and went into the city to see Kiri off on her train to Madrid where she was flying from. We had some coffee and made it back to school for class at 10:30. Wednesday afternoon we had our first intercambio event at school (mingling with spanish speakers trying to learn english etc.) and wednesday night was traditional 100 Montaditos.

Thursday we packed a bag lunch (bocadillo - well that means sandwich, but we use the term collectively) and headed into the city for our intercity excursion to the Real Alcazar, Sevilla's local palace. haha. It was pouring rain off and on (as it has been for the past week yick) but it was still a really fun trip...so beautiful! Thursday night was my friend Travin's 21st birthday, and true to American tradition, he gathered up all his friends for a night out on the town. I was resident photographer, so that he would not misplace his very nice camera between drinks. It was a lot of fun, we stayed out dancing until 5:30 in the morning. Then we walked a long way, so as not to over pay a taxi, and then I caught the metro home around 7:10 am. yes. that's what i said, 7:10AM, I made it to bed around 8am. phew. so fun though, and Travin had a blast.

So far so good here, the rain has been a little bit of a downer this week, but today is beautiful out, and I could go on a run outside. And this time next week, I will be living it up in Ireland!

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Italica! The Cathedral! Tiana y el Sapo! and 100 Montaditos!











Pictures! the cathedral, the cathedral ceiling, the main altar in the cathedral, the climb, and a view from the top!






Ok. SO SORRY...i am way behind here. haha oops. Like I said before, Spain is a blur and time just slips right through your fingers, and before you know it, you are a week and a half behind on your blog. how does it happen??? oh well.

Soo. I am going to start back where i can remember...Ok two wednesdays ago (not yesterday, but the one before) we went to Cien (1oo) Montaditos....the coolest little restaurant ever. And Wednesdays are everything for 1 euro! it is awesome. they have a million little sandwhiches and drinks and its amaaaazing. SO FUN. We met new people, and bonded and had a grand old time.

Friday we went on the trip with school to the Roman Ruins of Italica (not in Italy, but in Spain..20 minutes from Seville...leftovers of Roman occupation a million years ago). It was pretty awesome...not going to lie. It was a beautiful day after rain the one before, and we had a fun tour guide and, you know me, I love ruins. haha. It was really fun.

The remainder of the weekend was spent mostly doing homework, but Saturday night we went to see The Princess and the Frog (new favorite movie) in SPANISH! Fortunately I could follow along because I saw in in english over Christmas with Dane's family. But it was still really great in Spanish...quite an experience. And, Sunday morning, Lisa and I ventured out to the Mercadillo in Montequinto (just to clarify because there is one in Sevilla too) before church. The mercadillo was really fun, like a flea market, but everything is new! its awesome...and Very cheap. haha. they have everything you could ever want there: fresh produce, underwear, clothes, jewelry, candy, shoes...its amazing. I bought red boots for 5 euro and a chunky sweater for 8 :-) its awesome. Then we went to sunday school at Lisa's church...such an experience! it was great though...pretty different, yet the same. it was nice.

Tuesday this week we packed a lunch and headed out straight from school into the city center to go on our tour of the Cathedral. A-MAZ-ING. it is incredible there! SO HUGE! ginormous! Truly awe inspiring...i cant even describe it well enough to try. Christopher Columbus is (allegedly) buried there! Wow. After the self-guided tour (spent mostly with our mouths open) we climbed the Giralda. The Giralda is a huge tower that you climb up (yes climb - 32 stories or something like that) But the views are incredible! the best in the whole city they say. This whole trip was free for us because we are UPO students...how awesome. After that, Lisa and I headed to Starbucks to meet with our bible study group. Also really great; it was nice to be with others in the same boat as us and in the Word.

Last night (Wednesday) we returned to 100 Montaditos for more fun. And Mary, Arianna, and I purchased tickets to Ireland for the last weekend of this month! WOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO holleration. SO PUMPED. This weekend we are going to Cadiz for Carnival (big festival/costume party) and it is going to be a blast! Time is continuing to fly...but I am loving every second here! Cannot believe I am so blessed. finances are a little tight due to the school screwing me over a bit, but God will provide...and prayers would be appreciated (so that my funds can last!) Anyway, I love you all, and miss everyone tons.

Monday, February 1, 2010

Books, la copesteria, shopping in Spain, tree climbing, and Star Wars





What a ride being in Spain is...never a dull moment I tell you! I have been busy busy busy, exploring the streets of the city, sightseeing, and finding good deals on awesome clothes and things. I have discovered the beauty of the city on a night tour, seen the Plaza de España, shopped with the locals, conquered the copestería at the university, climbed trees in el parque de maría luisa, and made it through my first few days of classes. Whoosh!

Today we went to go see the Cathedral...it is beautiful and huge...the largest in Spain I believe, however, it closes at five, and we arrived at 5:02, they mean business! I ate my first ice cream cone in Spain, and it was delicious. Way better than your average, every day American ice cream ;-) We then went to see the Plaza de España, and it was beautiful even under construction. It is where part of Star Wars was filmed. Queen Amadala's palace! woooo! Anywho, I posted a photo album on my facebook page with all the pictures of Spain thus far. I am going to post more here, but not all of them. I don't have much to say except that I have yet to encounter a Spanish food I don't love, I was told that one of my teacher's was dead (he isn't) by a lady laughing hysterically (at me) in the copestería, Lola is wonderful, Lisa is wonderful, my classes are hard as crap, but wonderful, I am a metro pro, and I got to meet little Lola (Lola's daughter) and her cute dog Audrey.

I love you all and would love to hear from any of you! send me an email if you would like!
hugs and kisses to all at home!

Saturday, January 30, 2010

one week down...so fast

I cannot believe how much I love it here. It is so fun and so beautiful and I have great friends and family. But in spite of all that, I still miss home and everyone there. Classes are really fun and challenging, but my professors are super nice. I have been around center city Sevilla more, and every time I see more things that are so beautiful.

I can't believe that it has already been a week! I am having such a great time! much love to everyone at home!

FRIENDS: lauren, mary, and I

Thursday, January 28, 2010

El Primer Día de la Escuela!










Photos: Top: The Guadaliquivir River that runs through Sevilla Bottom: Me, Arianna, and Mary in center city Sevilla.




Yesterday was my first day of classes. I was really really nervous because they were all to be taught in Spanish. My roommate Lisa and her friend Lauren turned out to be in my first class. This was handy because I was definitely not late for my first class. My first class was a Literature class that focuses on "El Quijote." It will certainly be a challenge seeing as it means that I have to read an entire book in Spanish...yikes. At least I know people in the class so we can work together some. My professor seems really nice though and I could understand everything she said! yay! It turns out that if I focus really hard on the professor, I can get a lot. It was also encouraging to hear lots of students who had been to other Spanish speaking countries and were really good at Spanish, say that Spain's dialect is reallly reallly difficult to understand at first. They speak really fast here, lisp their s's and z's into "th", and if their happens to be an s at the end of a word, they just drop it. CONFUSING. anywho. The professors are really great, and going home after school, I understood Lola a ton better. She had just gotten back...she was in Madrid visiting her son for a few days.

My second class is sort of like Reading and Composition at an Intermediate level. It will be hard, but I think I will learn A LOT in there. Useful things too, I hope. My third class is a Culture and Civilizations class and the professor is hilarious. I don't think he speaks any English whatsoever. If the professor wasnt good, that class would be horrifically boring I think. My first class is at 10:30 and I get out of my last one at 2:50. What a fantastic schedule, eh? That is perfect: I get home just in time for lunch and siesta! Which is perfect because everything is closed during siesta, so why go out anyway? (siesta is from 2 pm to 5pm). I officially think there should be a siesta in every country. It makes the general stress level of life go down significantly. Today (Thursday) I only have one class, and it is from 1:30-2:50. SO NICE! It is a Phonetics and Linguistics class...eek. I am a little worried about it, but hopefully it will be interesting and doable!

So, it is actually a bit colder here than I thought. Well, no. That's not true; I just thought that the warm would feel warmer. haha. And it is freezing in my house. No heat. When you live in the Mediterranean, and you only have one "cold month" a year, it is definitely NOT cost efficient to have heat in your home. I invested in some 3 euro slippers first thing. I also just purchased the cutest coat in the entire world. It was not expensive, and it will keep me very warm. The wind here is CRAZY. Kind of like Boone, except not as cold by far. It is so beautiful here! I just love it.

The exchange students are going on an "excursion to the Roman Ruins of Italica" in two weeks!!! yayayayay ITALICA....which is in Spain....
I will continue to keep you posted :-)
xo
ks

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

tour + friends + beautiful downtown sevilla = awesome

Downtown Sevilla is the most beautiful place in the whole entire world. Hands down. At least, it is the most beautiful place that I have ever been or seen. Some of the exchange students went out on a free walking tour of the city last evening around 7 pm. It was so incredible. Before that, me, Arianna, Mary (the girls I traveled with), Lisa, Lauren, and Jenn (my roommate and her friends) went out shopping for a little bit. We had so much fun! The tour was amazing! The architecture and history of the city is breathtaking. We learned some fun facts (example: any soccer - futbol - team that has "real" in front of their name - Real Madrid - is only called that because a member of the royal family was a big fan and attending lots of games), and some incredible history (the Moors from Africa reigned over most of Spain for 800 years, and heavily influenced the language, the art, and the architecture), and saw amazing sites of historical and current significance (El Mercado de Triana - the market of Triana - is on the site of the original Spanish Inquisition / we saw the home of La Esperanza de Triana a rival statue of the Virgin Mary that is seen during the parades during Semana Santa, prior to Easter...her rival in fame and beauty is La Esperanza de la Macarena). We concluded the tour with a cup of free arabic tea (yummm) and great visiting. After that new friends went out with old friends to get to know each other and to explore the city and have some fun!
What a great day!

Today, I had a super long (but helpful) orientation session, and got my class schedule. I got all the classes that I requested and I have an amazingly awesome schedule. All of my classes are in Spanish, so it will be quite an adventure. Any and all prayers are appreciated.

xoxo
ks

pictures to come!

Sunday, January 24, 2010

Nueva Comanpera











Photos: (Top) how I usually take my meals... (Bottom) the view from my bedroom window

When I woke up this morning, my roommate Lisa was here! Yay new friend! She is wonderful so far and is very helpful. She speaks incredible Spanish and has been here one semester already. Woo hoo. She is an excellent wealth of information on things that I need to get and stuff. It is really good so far. Maria is also incredibly helpful and sweet. She took me out this afternoon to see if I could find an ATM that would take my debit card. WE FOUND ONE! woooooo. I was very happy to find that I did, in fact, have access to my money. It would have been a serious downer if that had not been the case.

I still am adjusting to my new time schedule. It is very strange to me that I have to wait until the afternoon before I even consider calling home. I still need a phone, but Lisa says that it wont be a problem at all, and we can go tomorrow...after my placement exam. I am really worried about that. Ugh. What if it turns out that I dont know any Spanish at all? Boo. What if I cannot even place into the classes that I need to take? I pray that these are idle worries. The clouds are finally parting and I can see some blue skies. I hope they are here to stay!

Saturday, January 23, 2010

La lluvia :-/

So it rained all day today. Blah. I was hoping to get some good exploring under my belt but no such luck. It let up a bit early this afternoon and I was able to make the quick trek to UPO (the university) I couldnt get far or see very much, because of the immediate and strong recurrence of the rain. (As it seems the Rain in Spain does not only Fall Mainly On the Plain). It then proceeded to pour its guts out all day long. Ah well. Then I had the inspired idea to take pictures of the house to post, only to find that my camera battery was dead. Oh well. So i took a nap instead. I am still recovering from jet lag I think, and the rain multiplied this effect.

Last night the big news story happened:
I woke up to a giant crash in my room. It scared me awake and I sat up and immediately looked around. I didnt see anything out of place, so I went back to sleep. Five minutes later I heard another loud crash. Again I got up and turned on the light but saw nothing of interest. So now that I was wide awake I decided to check my emails etc. Since it was still pretty early at home in the States. I proceded to pull out my desk chair and see the reason for the crash. The entire contents (not that much) of my desk drawer were laying on the floor along with the bottom of the drawer. Awesome. Not even in the country 36 hours and already I broke something. Great.
Not to mention that I had to look up like thirty words to explain to Lola what happened.

At any rate she saw it this morning and laughed, explaining that it would be inexpensive for her to repair it. She spent the day in Madrid today.

Thats about all for today...I am posting a picture of my room, since my camera is charged again and its the only lit room in the house at the moment (electricity is very expensive) and it is dark outside.











I love you all dearly.

te amo
kms

Friday, January 22, 2010

AQUI!

I have finally at long last arrived in Spain. Of course it is beautiful, but I am almost too tired to notice. It was a very long trip. Almost as soon as I was ready for the trip to get underway, I was ready for it to be over. The flight from Charlotte to Chicago was pretty painless and was passed in crosswords. The layover in Chicago was bizarre and longer than expected. Our flight ended up leaving over an hour late and we sat on the runway for what seemed like hours waiting to take off. I ended up having a section of two seats to myself for the nine hour flight which was really great.

But I officially have my first multicultural horrifyingly embarrassing moment: I packed a pretty hefty backpack (courtesy of Brian Lakin) and for comfort I had it strapped to a set of attachable wheels. "It will definitely fit in the overhead bins!" (-Mom). right? WRONG! Although I definitely should receive an A++ for my effort. First of all I had to stand on my tippy toes with my 22 lb bad over my head to even reach the bin. great fun. I begin the cramming process but nothing happens. Absolutely nothing. I, of course, PERSEVERE! again and again I attempt this impossible feat and finally a very short, very middle aged, very balding man offers to assist me. Does his sudden outburst of sweaty yet valiant efforts yield positive results? Well, seeing our obvious failure, the flight atttendant comes over to offer his services. Hoping to be of some assistance, he begins rapidfire instructions in Spanish. I am fulstered and cannot figure ot what he is saying, that poor man is sweating and still cramming and Fernandes our flight attendant is gesticulating and jumping and shouting. Finally I catch the word "ruedas" which I think maybe means wheels. And suddenly i understand. I must (of course) remove the oh so easily removable wheels to fit my backpack in the overhead compartment. yay.

anyway, I got to enjoy my first in flight meal on a plane. Not too bad, all things considered.

I also was annoyed by some chatty Italians (or maybe Portuguese?) gentlemen sitting behind me. They somehow managed to talk above the volume of my iPod for the entire nine hour flight. the ENTIRE nine hour flight. It was great. However, it was a cultural experience.

I conked out on the one hour flight from Madrid to Sevilla. It is so beautiful here; and aside from the fact that the ATMs in the airport dont take my debit card, it was a painless taxi ride to Lola's house. It is perfect. This neighborhood is absolutely amazing. So many colors! The house is delightful and I have my own little room. Lola is the sweetest woman ever, and makes me feel very at ease even though she speaks zero English. Zero.

She made me a delicious tortilla espanola for dinner, and I might have a new favorite food. I am very happy so far, but I definitely miss home a bit. I think for now though I am going to hit the hay. I am very very tired.

Love and (as Lola says) Un Beso!

Thursday, January 21, 2010

ready to go!

I have been waiting forever. and ever.
and ever.
I AM READY TO GET ON THIS FLIGHT AND GET TO SPAIN! fortunately airports are semi entertaining...and I like them. I feel like I should contribute a "thanks" section to everyone who expressed excitement for me at any point in time in my preparation to go to Sevilla. I have heard from many loved ones that my trip has been duly "prayed up" and will be blessed and super fun. I just know they are right! not that it is all fun and games going to a new country to attend school and to take classes in another language entirely.... a Little teeny tiny bit intimidating. yes? YES. But I am SO DANG EXCITED.

hopefully the bilingual-ness will be hasty in its arrival. :-)
also...this flight.

adios para ahora.
ks