Sunday, May 13, 2012

“Surrealism”


“Decir ‘Adiós’ es morir un poco”

Just as it was before I left 3 and a half months ago to come here, I have so many emotions floating around in my head and my heart that I can’t even begin to categorize or make sense of them. Happy? Sad? Anxious? Nervous? Excited? Heartbroken? If I had to pick just one, I guess the best fitting word would be: ready.

When I left for Spain, I was ready to start a new adventure; ready to see the world, meet new people, and make new experiences and memories for myself. I can honestly now say that I have successfully done all of that and more while I have been away from home. However, now that it is just about to come to a close in less than three ever so short days, I am also ready for this chapter of my life’s adventure to come to an end, and to return to the one place that I miss the most: home.

I can’t believe that it has all come and gone so quickly. I can write it down, I can say it out loud, but three days still feels so far away. It feels like the day that I come home will never arrive, like it is always just slightly out of my grasp. But at the same time, isn’t that how the feeling of home always seems to be? Once you leave, you can never really “go back” even though they say you always can. Sure, once you grow up, move out, go away to college, whatever and wherever it is that your life takes you, you can return to visit, but somehow… it isn’t ever really the same, is it? I know that the word “home” has a different connation for all, but for me, I can now see more than one place in my head when I think of home.

The first images are ones of my lime green bedroom in my parents’ home; a backyard full of trees and brambles; my little sisters smiling face; my parents cooking breakfast in the kitchen; my cat sunbathing on the front porch…Saugatuck. Lake Michigan over the top of a sandy dune, with the sun shining in every direction, sending glimmering shimmers across the water which seems to go on forever and ever…Mount Pleasant. Central Michigan University; my apartment; my beautiful roommates; my best friends; Beta Theta Pi…Sevilla, Spain…

Sevilla has come to grow into a home that I never imagined that it could become. I knew that I had already fallen in love with it before I even stepped off of my first plane ride ever, but what I did not know was how important it would become in my life and how much it would hurt me to leave it behind, now. A part of my heart will always stay here.. .within the winding streets and alleys, among the towers of the Giralda, between the flowers and hedge mazes of the Real Alcazar, floating on the gentle rolling tides of the Guadalquivir River, dancing in the fountains of Plaza de Espana, roaring in the stands with the fans of Real Betis F. C. , dancing quick time to a flamenco beat, pulsing with the rhythm of the discoteca, drifting through the air that smells sweet like orange blossoms and incense, and at the end, softly crying, watching one last sunset over the bridge before I make the last walk home with Ebony.

Ebony. Leaving her will be like leaving a part of my heart behind in yet another place. I cannot believe how impossibly close we have grown over the past months, and I can’t even image a world without her in it. I know that I have made a forever friend and Spanish sister in her, and I can’t wait for our roadtrips to see each other as the years continue on.

Years seem to be such a fleeting thing these days, though. Although my time here has passed so quickly and yet so slowly, I have begun to realize that my time in college is also about to fly by just as fast, leaving me just as breathless and caught off guard. Where does the time go when we are not looking and when we’re too busy, out having fun? The sunlit days and moonlit nights all blur together, and before we know it, we’re saying dreaded goodbyes, and closing the doors on things. But then new days always follow, and we open new doors, say ‘hello’ and ‘I missed you’, and ‘nice to meet you’.

But ‘goodbye’ is always the hardest of words to say, it seems, no matter how many new hellos come in its place. I have made so many good friends here, and seen so many beautiful things, that as much as I miss home and am dying to go back to it, I can’t bear the thought of seeing all these things go away. The difference is, when you leave home, you know that it is always going to be there, never changing, waiting for you to come back. It is just as it was, but yet you are not as you once were, and nor can you go back to being so. Spain has forever changed my life, and I have become a different person in many ways from studying abroad. I have learned how to: successfully travel on my own, make plans on the go in a split second decision moment, communicate in two foreign languages with more fluency and proficiency, accept things, situations, and people for who they are in a more open minded manner, be an independent woman, read maps, be brave, be strong, be FREE.

For someone who had never stepped foot on an airplane or gone west of the Mississippi up until four months ago, those are some pretty exciting accomplishments! I can successfully say that after this study abroad experience, that I have now seen 4% of the world, holy cow! It may not seem like a lot, but I am thrilled with that statistic. I have travelled in planes, trains, cars, buses, bikes, taxis, boats, and camels; I have eaten foods that I never before would have dared to try in my life; I have handled situations that I never thought before that I could handle; I have lived in a foreign country, and been absolutely enthralled with it. I have now visited: 2 continents, 5 countries, and 15 cities.

This is not to say that there were not “bad” moments where I got sad, or missed home, or had too much school work to go out and play for the day, but overall, the great moments outweigh the negative ones 100 to 1.

Right now, memories are just flashing through my mind like photographs. I can picture our very first days here in Sevilla, and how nervous I was, but also how excited I was. It felt like the whole city was so huge and vast that I would never be able to find my way around it. But now, I can’t imagine getting lost here! Navigating the little winding streets that spill out onto grand plazas filled with couples strolling hand in hand and kids playing soccer and laughing in delight all seem second nature to me. it’s going to take a lot to get used to walking out of school and, number one, not being able to walk anywhere! Here, I can walk everywhere and anywhere I like. At home in good ole Michigan, this is near impossible! However, I do miss my car more than words can express, and I am dying to put the pedal to the medal and roll all the windows down and just drive and drive and drive…

After all the trips that I have gone on, and all the places that I have seen, it is so surreal to think that the next plane I go on will be the one that is taking me home. Will home be the same now that I am different? Will I still fit into the places where I once belonged, or will the places and people have evolved, changed, and grew as much as I have? I don’t know what has been going on in some of my best friends lives, just as much as they don’t know what has been going on in mine. Will our worlds be able to meld back together with ease, or will there be tension? I have a strong feeling that the reverse culture shock is going to hit a lot harder and feel a lot weirder than the culture shock hit me when I landed in Spain. In an odd way, I feel as if I was sort of always meant to be here. The Spanish lifestyle is definitely something different than the life I lead back at home, but it was also surprisingly easy and comfortable to fall into it. It felt just as natural as breathing to wake up in the morning, eat a light breakfast, walk to school and enjoy the lovely weather and the breathtaking sites, sit in small, discussion based classes where the professors are all on a first name basis, and then return home for a big lunch of the freshest foods, take a siesta, wake up and do homework, relax, admire the city from the rooftop, and then enjoy every night as it came. As much as I enjoy having my own room at home and at my apartment, I will very much miss lying in bed every night and talking to Ebony until we both fell asleep. It was like a four month long sleepover, what more could you ask for?

My final weekend in Spain was perfect, and I am so lucky that I got to spend it with my Cheetah Girls: Ebony, Keslie, and Vasanthi. On Friday, after we finished some of our exams, we went out to a discoteca called Abril, and danced our feet off until 5 in the morning, just like true Spaniards. The night life here is certainly something else, and I was glad that we got to have one last go at it before it came to an end. On Saturday, we all went to Triana to do some shopping and walk on the riverside, and today, we went to Plaza de Espana and made fools of ourselves in the rowboats, splashing around. After lunch and a siesta, Ebony and I went to a bullfight, something that I still have mixed feelings about. This is how it works:

There are six bulls, and 6 toreros (matadors). In the beginning, all of the toreros, their ‘assistants’, and the men on horses  file into the bull ring for a prayer and a moment of silence out of respect for the bulls. Then, after everyone leaves the ring, the first torero goes back in alone. Suddenly, out of nowhere, a huge black bull with gleaming horns comes rushing into the ring. As the torero glides his red cape back and forth, dodging the massive, angry bull, the two dance from side to side, testing each other’s strength. Let it be known that in Spain, bull fighting is HUGE. It might even be tied, or even more popular, than soccer, which is saying something. There is a huge amount of respect placed on both the bulls and the toreros, since both are raised to play the parts that they do. The crowd loves a torero who can taunt and tease the bull without getting hurt, yet they also love a toro who is big, bold, fast and strong enough to defy the torero and graze him with its horns, or tear his cape away from him. The people love a bull who can show just how brave and strong he is, with no fear of the man in front of him. Before the fight, the torero throws his cap to the ground, showing his respect for the animal that he is about to challenge, and by the rules of the game, eventually kill. After the bull gets agitated, men on horses come out. The horses are in a thin layer of padding, and heavily sedated so that they cannot run. Then the bull charges. It literally lifts the horse into the air with its horns and thrashes it around. This is to further agitate the bull. However, at this time, the man riding the horse also has a spear, that he is trying to stab into the bull as it charges the horse. This is when the blood starts and where is starts to just get ugly. Now the bull is super mad, and three men with brightly colored spears shaped like bowling pins come out and have to try and jab them into the bulls back. Once they do, the torero comes out again, and once more, it is just him and bull in a final dance till the end. Once again, the people like a show. They don’t want to torero to fail, so they want it to be a fast kill, however, they also like a see the bull put up a damn good fight in the process. But even when the bull is tired, bleeding, foaming at the mouth, and swaying, it is hard as hell to take him down. These bulls are born and bred just for this purpose. They are given the best lifestyle that any bull could dream of. Just to die within 30 minutes. Eventually, the torero is able to drive his curved sword into the flesh of the bull, and down he goes. Then another man comes in and stabs him in the neck, in a spot where he dies instantaneously, supposedly. Then the bull is hooked up the horses, and dragged out of the ring, leaving a trail of blood in the dirt behind it. You can imagine what the ring must look like after six bulls or more…however, at the end, if the crowd deems that the bull was worthy and put up a valiant fight, they all stand up and fiercely cheer and applaud, waving white handkerchiefs in his honor. Then they also throw roses into the ring for the torero, to reward his bravery as well. I couldn’t help but cry during the entire fight.

So here we are. So close to the end, almost full circle. Surreal, don’t you think? A bullfight symbolizing the circle of life and death and the finality of all things; how some people die so others can benefit (every piece of the bulls meat goes to feed the hungry in Sevilla). And here I am once again, just as I was in the beginning, with a swirling mind and an uneasy heart.

See you in three days, America. 

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

“The Final Countdown”


So the final countdown begins: I arrive home in one week from today! At 2:15pm, on Wednesday, May 16th, I will be landing in the beautiful city of Chicago at O’Hare International Airport!

However, between now and then, there is a lot to get done. I have three final exams, two of which are this Friday! Which means I will be spending the next two nights studying my butt off. Thankfully, my final term papers have already been turned in, so that’s a load off my mind. After Friday’s exams, I have the weekend, and then nothing on Monday, one last exam on Tuesday, and then home on Wednesday. I can’t even believe how fast the time has flown by.

Yesterday, I had my last day of tutoring with Reyes and Angela. They were so sweet and they made me cookies all by themselves without the help of their mom! So even though the cookies were a little burnt and crumbly, and tasted like too much oil had been added, I gladly let them fill my plate full of star, moon, and heart shaped cookies, and we ate them all with chocolate milk. After words, since it was the last day and I didn’t want to do anything too difficult with them, we just played Pictionary with vocabulary words that I had put on cards. They had fun trying to draw dragons and castles and princesses. It was sad to leave them, and their mom welcomed me back any time that I liked, and the girls said they didn’t want me to leave because I was like a big sister to them. I literally almost cried. I hate goodbyes in any form, and I know that this week, a lot of them are ahead. I am trying really hard not to think about it just yet.

Tonight, a group of girl friends and I are going to go to Cien Montaditos one last time for €1 Wednesdays. I am really going to miss that place! Such awesome and cheap food, ugh! They could really make a lot of money if they opened up in a college town. Along with that “last”, a list of other “lasts” to come this weekend are: Alcazar gardens visit, Plaza de Espana visit, tapas everywhere and anywhere, drinks by the river, discoteca Buddha, Triana Market, and just generally enjoying Sevilla and soaking it all up these last seven precious days! The weather is certainly telling us to go outside: 90 degrees and hot hot hot! Too bad we don’t have enough time to go to the beach one last time. Oh well, Lake Michigan will be just as welcoming (albeit cold) when I come home so soon.

Along with all the lasts, there is also one first: on Sunday evening, Ebony and I are going to a Bull Fight! Something that I am secretly terrified to do/see, but I know that the cultural significance for Spain is HUGE so I want to see one for that reason. Wish those poor torros some suerte, por favor!

I am jealous that everyone at home is done with exams, you lucky ducks! Throw some suerte my way, while you’re at it with the torros!

Jenn

Sunday, May 6, 2012

“!Hala Madrid!”


As weird as this is to write, this is my last post about a trip from study abroad! There will be no more weekends of just jetting around Europe! However, as much as I feel blessed to have been able to have all the experiences that I did and see all the beautiful cities and places that I did, I am definitely very ready to just have to get on one more plane in ten days: the one that will take me home.

Madrid started off rainy, and when Brent and I met in the airport on Thursday, it was quite wet and dark outside, much to our dismay. However, that didn’t stop us from going out and exploring! We checked into our hostel, and then went out and explored a little bit of the city. We stopped for a snack, since Brent had to try some typical Spanish cuisine: Chocolate con Churros! Also, we had one of Brent’s favorite lunches: Cien Montaditos! After, we went to Plaza Mayor, and then explored a cool open air market. Not as cool as the one in Barcelona, for the record! We walked up the Paseo del Prado, and walked through Parque Retiro, which was very nice, but would have been much better in the sun! We went to the Museo de Reigna Sofia, which is one of the modern art museums in Madrid. I really liked it because not only did they have modern art pieces, and rotating temporary exhibits, they also had classic pieces like “Guernica” by Picasso! It is much more amazing than I could have imagined in person. There were also several works by Dalí, Miró and Calder. Surprisingly, even Brent enjoyed himself at the museum. There was an exhibit related to economics and he liked that one a lot. After we left the museum, we made our way back to the center of town, and after looking around for awhile in the rain, we had some amazing tapas for dinner.

Friday, we got an early start and had some great Spanish breakfast at a café near our hostel. We also did a little bit of shopping in the main shopping district; however, we cut it short since we wanted to see more sights! We were planning on going on the free walking tour with our hostel, but it was such a joke that we dipped out after five minutes. After we decided on our final shopping purchases, we made our way to Templo Debod, which is an Egyptian worship temple that was donated to Madrid after Spain’s help in some war of theirs, way back when. After words, we went to the Palacio Real, which is where the Royal Family lives! We explored it a bit, and then we went to Montaditos once again for a feast of a lunch. We then rode the metro two stops down to the Estadio Vicente Calderon, where Atletico Madrid Futbol Club plays. We wanted to see how much tickets would cost for the game on Saturday night (we didn’t end up buying them, anyway, even though they were pretty reasonably priced). At this point in the story comes some semi bad news. After we left the stadium, we rode the metro back to the center, indenting to go to the Museo del Prado, which I was of course really excited about. However, once we got off the metro, I realized that my camera had either gotten lost, or stolen from my jacket pocket. Sadly, there is not a happy moment here, where I can tell you that after looking, I realized that I had it all along, because this is not the case. I did not find it, and it is still lost forever to Madrid. At this point, I was really upset about losing my camera, but I didn’t want to let it ruin my mood/our great weekend, so we still tried to go to the Prado. However, once we got into the really long line, we realized that it was during the free public visiting hours, so we left, deciding to leave the museum for Saturday. Then, in search of something to do, we tried to go to the Thyssen Foundation, another art museum, and they said that it would take three hours to get through, and they closed in two, so that was a bust. Since we were both a little down after this, we just decided to save a little money and make dinner in the hostel that night, so we bought some wine and some pizzas and ended up just staying in and talking all night, which was actually very nice and cheered me up. Brent is a very good person to talk with.

On Saturday, we hit the ground running, determined to get everything in on our last day. We started off with another huge breakfast, complete with churros and horchata, and then we went to the Museo del Prado right when it opened. It was even more amazing than I could have imagined, and we walked through rooms and rooms full of Titian, El Greco, Goya, Cranach the Elder, Bosch, Velazquez, Bernini, and more and more and more! It never ended! It took us about 3 hours to get through the entire museum, but it was well worth it, and I loved every second of it. After the Prado, we went back to the hostel for a moment to rest our feet and eat our leftover pizza. Then we were off again and we went to El Estadio Santiago Bernabeu, where Real Madrid Club Futbol plays! We went on a tour of the stadium, which was really really cool and I enjoyed it a lot. Best futbol club in the world! After we left, we went to Starbucks and sat outside just spending some time just enjoying the sunshine, the weather got a lot better after the rain on Thursday! We ended up going back to the Palacio Real and walking around the Royal Gardens and then we just walked allllll over the city, exploring all of the “nooks and crannies” and doing some window/souvenir shopping. That evening, we sat in the hostel lounge and we watched Chelsea play Liverpool and win the FA Cup title! After that, we went back out to get tapas for dinner, which were amazing and a delicious way to end the weekend.

This morning, we had to get up early because my flight back to Sevilla left at 8:20am. Brent went with me to see me off, and then he went back to the hostel to sleep for three more hours until check out. His flight didn’t leave until 4:30, so sadly, he had the afternoon to himself in Madrid. I always hate saying goodbye to him, even if it is only another 3 to 4 weeks until I see him again once we’re both back in the states. I hope that he makes it back to Prague alright! Overall, despite the camera loss and the rain, we had a great weekend, and I always enjoy every moment that we spend together. It was a great final trip for both of us to end our study abroad semester on.

On the other hand, both of us are ready to go back to the states for the summer. We agreed that as much as we have loved everything we have seen and everywhere we have been, there is no place in the world like being home with all your family and friends. Every trip that I have taken this month has made me more and more anxious to go home. In just ten short days, I finally get to go home! As much as I will miss Spain, I am ready! I just have to make it through four days of class this week, and then 2 days of final exams next week. This weekend, some girls and I might go to the amusement park in Sevilla for one last time to hang out together.

Congratulations to everyone at CMU on graduating this weekend! I am jealous that you all are done with exams and on summer vacation already! I can’t wait to see everyone so soon :) Just pray that I make it through classes, finals, and packing in the next ten days!

xoxo