Monday, May 30, 2011

Genau!

I was searching Google for an explanation of why Austrians put corn on their pizza when I found this simply hilarious blog about living as an American in the German-speaking world. Although I've found that Austrians actually eat slower than Americans, I still found the following post about sharing meals with German speakers to really hit the nail on the head.

Sunday, May 29, 2011

Bist du ein Native Speaker?

There was a Dutch psychologist visiting our Institut last week, which gave me a chance to experience another aspect of European work culture, namely its largely international flavor. Europe is really pouring its heart into the whole European Union thing, by and large, and I'm constantly amazed by the large diversity of Europe-wide initiatives. ERASMUS, the student exchange program and general network of European universities, is an excellent example of this, and meeting students from all over the continent during an ERASMUS semester is quickly becoming a rite of passage for European students (it even has its own cult film!)

Yours, Formally

German, like many other languages around the world but unlike English, has two ways of saying you: "du" (informal) and "Sie" (formal).* In your first-level language class, you complain about having to learn the extra conjugation, but this is only a minor annoyance, you think, in a language with many major ones. Then you start living in the German-speaking world, and you realize that even though you can conjugate both forms, you don't have the foggiest idea of how to use them.

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Riding the Waves

My first night in Wien was simply spectacular. I needed to pick up my room key from a friend who's here with Central College Abroad for a year directly upon my arrival, and so I sat outside the Westbahnhof U-Bahn-Station for twenty minutes. The weather was gorgeous, there were pleasant smells wafting from cafe across the sidewalk from me, and I kept hearing snippets of conversations in the beautiful, lilting Austrian Dialekt I've come to know and love. I was also glad to (finally!) unpack my suitcase after 10 days of traveling. And that night, I met up with Marshall, another Central College student I knew from last semester, for döner kebab and a beer at a park near our Wohnheim. As we walked through the gorgeous, familiarn side streets of the 6. Bezirk (district), I wanted to scream "Wien! Ich bin wieder da!" at the top of my lungs. I couldn't believe I was finally back.

Monday, May 23, 2011

Thoughts on the Plane


Ich hab im Flughafen ein Schild für einen Flug nach Dallas-Fort Worth gesehen, und plötzlich ist es mir eingefallen, dass ich eine große Menge Zeit im Ausland vor mir habe, bevor ich heimfliege. Und ich habe plötzlich Angst. Nicht die gute aufregende Angst, die man hat, bevor ein neues Abenteuer anfängt, sondern richtige ernsthafte Angst. War es wirklich eine gute Idee, den Sommer hier in Österreich zu verbringen, bloß weil ich im Jänner nicht bereit war, ein neues Semester an Harvard anzufangen? Weil ich mein wunderschönes spannendes Auslandssemester nicht beenden wollte? Ich war endlich wieder in Amerika eingelebt. Ich habe da Freunde, die mich wirklich lieb haben, und ich habe ein ganzes Leben da gebaut. Was hab ich in Österreich? Einige gute Erinnerungen, einige leere Bierdosen, einige Bekannte aus meinem Studentenheim. In Wirklichkeit ganz und gar nichts. Was suche ich in der Ferne? Wieso bin ich überhaupt auf der Suche? Ich habe gar keine Ahnung, was diesen Sommer passieren wird, und das stört mich.

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Photo Journal of France

After London, I spent a wonderful week in France with two of my good friends from Harvard, Eunice and Marion. We stayed at Marion's family home in Villeneuve-les-Bordes, in the province of Ile-de-France, a small village about an hour away from Paris.

The central courtyard of Marion's house. Whereas American houses are compact and then have yards to the outside, European houses are square-shaped and have inner courtyards, which allow for more privacy.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

The Charmed Life

This year, the stars aligned perfectly for a European vacation with my friends from Harvard. Marion had a polo match against Oxford (the men’s team – yes, she is that legit!) over the weekend, and then planned to spend a week at her home in France before heading back to Boston for a physics internship, while Mariam was expecting to spend a week in London with her best friend from Georgia (the country) who just completed a journalism program there. Because I would be in Austria for the summer anyway, it just made sense for me to join them. And when Eunice heard that a trip to London and Paris was being planned, she couldn’t pass up the opportunity. So, before fulfilling January’s promise to myself and returning to the country of my dreams, I spent the weekend in London with my friends.