Saturday, December 12, 2009

THIS DESERVES A POST.

I GOT MY PASSPORT IN THE MAIL YESTERDAY, WITH MY CZECH VISA.

... i am actually going abroad! WIN.

i also got an email from the office of international studies assistant director asking me why i haven't paid the 500-dollar deposit for cerge-ei. um. hopefully that is going to be resolved soon.

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

two months!

december 1: two months to go!

as dorky as it sounds, i purposely waited until today for my second blog posting. i don't want to seem too eager - and i'm sure when i'm actually abroad, i won't be updating as much as i want to. well it is already december, meaning i am not only closer to prague, but i am also closer to leaving wes for eight months. not too much has changed since my last post - none of my final papers have been canceled and i still have an impending econ exam (a different one, but it will be just as hard). well. glad to know some things don't change.

i have nine days of class left and a short 22 days on campus before leaving. not sure if my travel plans were finalized a month ago, but i am leaving wes on december 23 and staying in new york with a family friend for a week before leaving for seoul on december 30. i'll arrive at the airport around 10pm on december 31, so chances are high that i will spend the last hours of 2009 and the first hour of 2010 in transit. i can't believe it but it's been 11 months since i've been home, so i can't wait. i'll have a month to relax (read: lots of tv) and maybe think about my future before leaving on february 1.

a little bit about my actual study abroad program. i'm studying at CERGE-EI - (center for economic research and graduate education - economic institute) but fear not, i am not taking graduate classes.. or any econ, for that matter. a branch of CERGE-EI includes the study abroad program - UPCES - undergraduate program in central european studies. this is where i will be taking courses with study abroad students from the states, some from the czech republic, and european students who are studying in the erasmus program (the european version of study abroad). there are 47 american students going to prague - two from wesleyan, and a lot from umich and middlebury. i have yet to meet my wesleyan counterpart, but i hear he's quite nice.

i picked out my classes last week, so this is what i'll hopefully be taking:
-elementary czech
-prague as a living history (read: each class will be a field trip. epic!)
-european integration from a central european perspective
-life in a totalitarian regime
-hopefully an independent study religion course

thanksgiving was just a couple days ago, and it made me think a lot about all the things that i am thankful for - including the opportunity to go abroad. as i started taking down pictures and postcards in my room, i realized a few things.

1) i am old. i'm 20, turning 21 in less than two months, and i'm about to go live in a foreign country for four months where i don't speak the language and where i don't have any friends.

2) still, i can't wait.

my next post will be in 2010 - probably a few days after new year's, when i'm settled in at home. these are the places i've been - and soon, there will be lots of pictures of the places i will go! (i'm also trying to get used to incorporating pictures into blog posts). fancy.


great wall of china, summer 2006


fall break in new york, fall 2007


new year's eve in grand rapids, january 2008


wesleyan univ, middletown, ct, fall 2008


yellowstone lake, summer 2009

travel itinerary for 2010 includes czech republic, germany, austria, france, italy, and hopefully others :)

Sunday, November 1, 2009

departure date: three months!

in exactly three months, i will be in prague, czech republic!

well, at least i hope so. i decided on my walk back from chinese house that instead of reviewing my econ notes or reading the body and society for my early christianities class, i would create a blog in preparation for my semester abroad. all of this is a little presumptuous because i have a long way to go before i actually make it to europe. some things that have to be done first (in no particular order):

1) get my long-term schengen visa and my passport back.
2) buy a plane ticket - first to go from new york to seoul, then another plane ticket to go from seoul to prague.
3) somehow survive finals week (which will include five papers and a presentation).
4) figure out what to do with all my belongings (storage?) and also figure out how to pack for eight months into two suitcases since my mom shot down the idea of me buying another suitcase.
5) hopefully pass an econ exam next week which covers a whole lot of material i don't understand.
...
among other things.

anyhow. i did want to write a couple things to start off my euroblog on a positive note. first, i don't speak a lot of czech (and by that i mean i know how to say hello, yes, and please) but i did look up a phrase that i hope means what google translate says it means. nový začátek
- it is supposed to mean "new start," which is exactly what a semester abroad will be! junior year has been stressful, insanely challenging, and definitely unexpected in more ways than one. as much as i love wesleyan, i think spending a semester away will put a lot of things into perspective and help me get my life together (as in come back senior year knowing what i want to do with my life). yes, it's a tall order but hey, one can dream. to be honest i can't really picture my life away from wes for an entire semester so i don't know how i'll feel three months from now when i'm settling into a new country as opposed to returning to my room in fauver. i can list about 8012391023123090 things i'll miss about wes but i won't.

it's funny to think that four years ago, i was a junior in high school - it's been four years since i moved back to seoul and was a junior at korea international school at our gaepo campus. four years since nerdstorm and ap calculus with mr. davis. four years since mr. webster's ap lit class with four people, reading hamlet and missing the forest in sylvia plath's poetry. four years ago, i was writing novel-length emails to claudia, nina, and kim on a regular basis. it doesn't feel like it was that long ago, but here i am, twenty years old and three months away from spending an entire semester in a foreign country. really, i can't believe that. so much has changed in four years. i never considered being a religion major, never thought i would spend an entire summer in montana (never thought i would even go to montana), and always assumed i would be abroad in france. i can't wait to see what life in prague is like, and i can't wait to look back four years from now and see how things are. i was sixteen when i was in seoul. i'll be twenty-one in prague. who knows where i'll be when i'm twenty-five?

well. i have not been having a whole lot of luck with the czech consulate, to say the least, so i will keep my fingers crossed that my student visa situation will be processed and returned to me in a timely fashion. by that, i mean two months because it takes up to sixty days. in the meantime, i am going to try to balance my workload and keep that lonely planet guide to the czech/slovak republics in my bag to read about castles and churches and much more. there are a lot of other places in the czech republic that i want to visit - there are apparently a lot of hikes/nature trails so i really want to visit those places in the spring. also, my friend julie (that i met this summer in montana) is in paris all year studying at sciences po so i'm already planning a trip to see her in april during my spring break. other places i want to visit include germany, poland, austria, italy, hungary (we'll be going to budapest on our overnight trip), switzerland, and more. i'm hoping to stay in europe an extra week after my program ends on may 21 and i want to go to zagreb or maybe even fly to greece! we'll see :)

for now, i'm still in middletown, ct. time to go back to hypothesis testing and confidence intervals.