Sunday, January 31, 2010
Guten Morgen.
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
Old Lissa and her American Laugh
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So this weekend was an amazing weekend: five days full of laughs, tango, museums, English, old jokes, Poker, döners, and Americans. : ) Really, a beautiful weekend. I went to my first three classes on Thursday, blew through my presentation on children in the Middle Ages, then happily ran around screaming goodbyes and hugs as I went home to grab my suitcase for Köln and took a small hiking backpack happily onto the train. I met Anne in Düren, and we oozed with happiness and excitement the entire way there. I literally couldn't shut up. We already started laughing and imagining the prospects waiting in store for us in Köln. It was going to a different world, away from host families and German high school and fumbling over grammatical errors.
We made it Köln and met everyone in the Starbucks in the train station, already with 15 of there, we all talked about Köln. A lot of people just weren't looking forward to it, I still can't understand that. Seeing everyone at the Jugendherberge (Youth Hostile) was awesome. Every new arrival was screams and hugs galore! I saw Tiffany vaguely down the hallways and took off sprinting, Josh entered with guitar in hand and I almost put my knee through his guitar hugging him too hard, Dylan came and I immediately left the dinner line to greet him. I was so excited. I sat around and talked with people Thursday night, talking about our year and loving hearing everyone's German. It was so interesting to think that I had looked at these people in such an awe, when they had spoken German to me four months before. Gerd's speeches used to be a time when only two words in a ten minute talk would stick out to me, his first speech to us: I understood everything! EVERYTHING! Every freakin' word! I looked around the table during our first meeting, and everyone's face was such a comfort to me. I could start talking with any one of those people, and I had missed them so much in those four months, but the 6 empty spots at the conference table were unavoidably empty. Laying in Tiffany's bed Thursday night just brought so many smiles to my face as I realized I had just been at this place for 6 hours and I was already running on the highest energies.
Friday was a day in Bonn. I woke up and walked groggily back to my room, throwing on my Texan shirt from Tori E, it had been a great Christmas present. We ran around Bonn, running into stores and assimilating new wardrobes for the boys. My small group didn't see any of the museums, but as a group, we went to the Haus der Geschichte. : ) It had all the history of the Bundesrepublik Deutschland, which is now known simply as Germany. We were supposed to have a tour group in English and one in German, most people wanted German, so we ended up having both groups in German. It was insane. At the beginning of the tour, I was sitting there and absentmindedly listening then a thought occurred to me, "Holy crap, she is speaking German, and I am understanding all of it... That is cool!" I bought a ridiculously huge and heavy book, leaving the museum. That won't be any fun on the airplane, but I already sat down and read some of it last night, enjoying all the information. Friday night was great coming back, I wasn't allowed to join an all boys poker game, so I sat and talked with the girls.
Saturday was a day for seeing Köln! We got up and began the day with walking down the Rhein on our way to the city where we could spend our time doing what we want and going where we want. I must say, every time I see that Köln Dom, my mind jumps to that little model that has been sitting on our breakfast table for five years. I think of all the times that I absentmindedly played with it and ran my fingers around the two towers that dominated the Köln skyline. Every time I am now in the Dom, I look up and around me, and think back to how small our little model is, and I just soak in what it means to stand in this building. Me and Tiffany ran into the famous chocolate museum in Köln! I have heard so much about this place and have never gotten to see it until then! We had heard the warnings about how boring it was, but once we got to the factory part where you saw exactly how the chocolate was made... Not at all boring then. : ) And there was yummy samples! They also had a rainforest set up, so you could see the environment that the cocoa beans grow in and there was the history of chocolate and it's uses. I liked it, and I really liked the bag of very expensive truffles we bought. : ) We came back and sat through a ridiculously long seminar on the rules of our exchange and why those rules exist. Then I came back and had a difficult conversation and was surprised to see how it felt when I got what I wanted. Before I could breathe and accept what even happened, I was pulled out and on a search for tango lessons. It was great just running around and getting my mind off of things. Then even sitting down and listening to people picking at a guitar again, and hugging people just to figure out the theory of hugging, and listening patiently to rules of poker and seeing it all come down to just memorizing the paper of worths. We even got a permit to stay up past curfew for this poker party, the room was rearranged, furniture brought in, someone on drink duty. Talk about legit. I am now ready to play Dustin and Ricky back in Prosper. Bring it on, boys. : ) I was excited for every distraction, and it was just a great day.
Sunday: I got up early and made my way to the Dom for church, it seemed like a once in a lifetime thing. I was shivering the entire time. They do not put heaters in churches that are hundreds of years old! We went back for a huge seminar in the afternoon, already talking about going home and a Berlin seminar in June. I'll be in Berlin in 4 and a half months... I am excited! It was fun just hearing about the future and moving forward. I got my German test from the day before, we were supposed to see how we've improved. I was very satisfied with my test. : ) We made our plans for the evening and went out into the city. Literally skipping in the city and ducking into a place with Karneval music on loop, it was great talking to Billy, Dylan, and Sara. We even started dancing the tango to the Karneval music just because we could. We came back and danced Tango from 9:00 - 11:00, until it was decided that as long as we weren't screaming in the hallways anymore, we could stay up and curfew was nonexistent. Around midnight, we picked up dancing the tango again in the lobby. It was after 3:00 AM before the thought of stopping even occurred because our limbs were getting to tired to handle the five point tango. We were practicing for performing for the Bundestag in June! It will be a lot of work to put together, because we all live in pretty different parts of Germany, but it was still great. It was funny how once you did something that just had sounded so awkward and horrible, then you felt like you were doing the dance right and every move seemed to come easier, it flowed. I fell asleep in mid-sentence talking to Cazaria sometime around 4:00 AM. I was worn out.
Monday: Getting up was difficult. Watching everyone leave felt like the oddest thing ever. When would we see each other again? June? That's too far away. A group of us postponed our trains and went around discovering Köln. We went to a cafe and sat and talked as I almost fell asleep in my little chair, sipping tea. We even danced the tango a little bit in the cafe, working through ideas of what would work to dance in front of the German government of all people! We continued walking around Köln. We found the coolest store ever! You have got to see my Facebook photos if you haven't already! This outdoor store began with just being huge and having a huge pool to test canoes, kayaks, and diving gear. Then walking around and seeing all the cool things: an ice room with a thermal camera, ice chairs with pelts, and a wind machine to test winter jackets; a shower-looking like room where you could put on the water proof gear and just turn on the rain, there was wind there too to make a storm, but we couldn't figure it out (we danced the tango in the rain, technically); then there was a little aquarium filled with jelly fish; a rock climbing walkway, completely glass, where you could try out their shoes; and just so much more! I wanted to buy a nice hiking backpack and a tent so bad and just go on an adventure... I do want to do that more, truthfully. Finally, sitting on the train on my way home came with the weirdest feeling ever. "Back to school. Back to life. Away from the world that doesn't really exist in any other world." I had a great weekend and came back to an overflowing inbox with some of the weirdest news: my world kept going even though I had put it on pause coming to Germany than my German world kept on going when I left Aachen for Köln.
- Bonnie died, my dog since I don't know when, at least 12 years... I still can't believe it. Her cute brown eyes. Her cautious behavior. Her excited run when she saw our car pulling in the driveway. How she treated me like I was still the baby in the house, getting into trouble. I can't imagine going home and not seeing her there. I think my mind is still accepting it as a cruel joke or accepted it as the truth a lot better than I can imagine.
- My family in America is getting a German exchange student next year. I knew that a little while before, but it wasn't exactly official yet. We're getting a girl that actually doesn't live too far away from me here. We've emailed, and I would like to see her soon.
- Colleges still emailing me about my looming senior year and where I will be applying.
Sunday, January 17, 2010
I Have My Moments.
UPDATE:
From: .victoria lynn. [austauschschülerin]
Date: Jan 16, 2008 12:59 PM
only 5 months and 2 days till im home.
hahahah.
: )
Date: Jan 17, 2008 12:20 AM
haha.
counting much?
it isn't like you wanna come home right?
YOU LOVE GERMANY!
Date: Jan 17, 2008 12:31 PM
germany is cool.
dont get me wrong.
but being in america with family and friends is cooler.
Date: Jan 18, 2008 2:02 AM
come on Tor.
being away is hard
but learning to make the best of it makes it worth it.
you do realize that when you went to high school you tore it up!
right?
you made yourself loved/liked. and it worked.
people here miss you and they will welcome you back gladly
but it is your job to make the most out of Germany.
when you only have one chance to do something
don't you want to look back and think that it was worth it?
that you did everything you could?
and that you got something out of it that was amazing?
Date: Jan 18, 2008 9:32 AM
yes mommie.
thank you for the sermon.
: )
i am making the best of my year.
but my real friends and family are irreplaceable.
germany is cool.
i love it.
im having a blast.
prosper with my people is more my style.
From: a{lissa}ndria[blaise. not blaze.]
Date: Jan 20, 2008 5:07 AM
your welcome!
print it out and tape it on the bathroom mirror!
print it!
now!
you and severin can read it and get pumped up every morning!
good.
you better be!
and prosper people are only your style because that is how you grew up. people are different from place to place but they are still the same generally. it is human nature. you just miss the familiar faces and knowing everyone. you can deny it!
people are different.
there are all kinds of different people in the world.
didnt you ever learn that?
Thursday, January 14, 2010
Kuchen und Krankenheit.
"Hey! Möchtet ihr ein bisschen Kuchen?"
(Hey, do you guys want a little cake?)
"Uhmm... vielleicht ist es giftig.... warum willst du es nicht?"
(uhmm... maybe it is poisonous... why don't you want it?"
Evil glare from Lissa:
"Nein, ich habe gerade es bekommen und ich habe nicht so viel Hunger."
(No, I just got it, and I am not very hungy."
He takes the entire piece of cake.
"Okay, fine."
A couple days later, the two guys are retelling the store, trying to make me seem a little odd for carrying around this piece of cake and offering it to people. I immediately jumped in saying,
"Ich habe nur ein bisschen gemeint. Nicht die ganze Stuck! Du hast mein Kuchen gegessen." : (
(I meant only a little piece. Not the entire slice! You ate my cake...)
One of the boys started laughing, the one who had taken it, looked at me:
"Echt? Es tut mir leid! Ich bringe dir Kuchen!"
(Really? I am sorry! I'll bring you cake!)
I just started laughing at the thought. He is my neighbor, and he went on to tell me about how he would bake it and bring me an entire cake the next day, Sunday. I was only kidding, enjoying being a little feisty, and everyone was laughing, enjoying the thought of these two boys stealing my cake. : )
.Monday morning before school, I see him sitting in the cafeteria, and I decide my fun isn't quite up yet:
"Hey! Wo ist mein Kuchen? Ich habe nie mein Kuchen bekommen..."
(Hey! Where is my cake? I never got my cake...)
He said he was sorry and started typing a reminder on his phone to bring me cake. I had really just been kidding at this point. I didn't really expect a piece of cake from him.
"Hey! Hör auf! Es war nur ein Witz! Ich habe nur Spass gemacht!"
(Hey! Stop! It was only a joke! I was just kidding!"
Nothing happened for two days, the story of the cake kinda disappeared. Until leaving Physics yesterday when he showed up at my desk with a bag from a bakery in his hand and happily presented my cake. : ) I was very happy and surprised, but it made me laugh so hard to think that he had really done it. I rode the train home during my break, eating my cake with a smile on my face.
------------------------------------
Doctor, doctor! Any ideas?
Not my best writing, but something I just wanted to share. : )
Saturday, January 9, 2010
Words to the Wise...
Well back to writing in English about Psych!
Sunday, January 3, 2010
New Year. New Blog.
REVIEW OF 2009:
January: I rang in the New Year’s babysitting with Jana, laughing and playing with kids. I spent the first day of the year watching High School Musical 3 at the dollar theater on the weirdest date ever with my sister and my best friend there too. J I went home and talked about boys while eating fondue with Tori E and Jana. J My application was due for Germany.
February: Helping Dustin and Tori with elaborate Valentine’s plans for each other, more caught up in their plans than my own. My mom presented a question: "Lissa, what if you don't get this scholarship?" I had never really thought about it before for more than a second or two. The thought scared me. What would I do? Disappear for 10 months? Try to get into some other kind of program? I built a 10 month hole in my schooling schedule that made it impossible to continue with Junior year in August like a normal kid. I sang Usher with Tori E in the car then went home and ate fondue while watching a good ol' Disney movie.
March: I became friends with Felicia. Tori E and I celebrated her birthday lavishly at the Melting Pot. Felicia and I spent Spring Break sleeping in the TV room at Kristina’s dorm talking about her Swedish school and her friends. We drove to Houston Space Center. We drove to Galveston and danced in the sand and played in the waves. Jumping into beautiful jetés. We did cartwheels and felt the cold sea water rush along side us. The sun came out more.
April: I turned 16. I was so happy, a person can see that by looking at my driver’s license. I had the biggest ridiculous grin. I wore a tiara the entire day from the dentist office and brought home pink roses from Gwen. J I had Mexican food with my mommy. We ate my birthday dinner happily on the back porch and the sun poured in. Got Germany related gifts, even started packing to go. I read a list "You Know You've Been an Exchange Student when..." with Felicia, Tori, and Therese. I didn't understand it, I didn't relate. Went to A&M again and celebrated with Kristina. We danced in fountains. We drove through the night.
May: AP Exams. Studying. Stressed. Taking pictures with Tori Elenburg by the dozen. I had a new smile from April, I felt genuine and real. Laying outside tanning with Felicia and coming back so red for my sister’s graduation: it wasn’t funny. We sent Gary home. We sent Felicia home.
June: I danced at my recital. My mom said I was gorgeous and belonged up there. I loved performing. I liked the other moms worrying about silly things like how straight my bow was and the bobby pins in my hair. I missed that part of dance by starting late. Started working hard. Babysitting and working at the dentist office. I put on a wig and became Wade Winalot. Started VBS. Got a phone call one day at the dentist office: “Lissa, would you want to work in Hawaii?” I quit my jobs. I was on a plane to Phoenix 19 hours later. I saw Staci for the last time before Germany. I went to Hawaii. I played with Renee and soaked up a different sun. I went running for the sunrise and listened to crowing roosters at 5AM. I went to bed still rocking slightly by the ocean and feeling the waves rush between my legs even under the covers. I belonged in the water. Jana joined me.
July: I learned more about the world than I ever thought I would. It was intense. I took it as truth. I saw some of the most beautiful things. I jumped off of waterfalls fearless. I met scary men in ancient Hawaiian graveyards. I stopped noticing when it started randomly raining and life went on. I went home tanned and blonde. The word "Thank You" developed a new importance. I went tubing with my family and Jana. I sat in the back seat and listened to my sisters tell me about how Germany would be. I enjoyed my family time.
August: I decorated the dentist office playroom. I ran around with Tori on our last missions together. Toys R Us. Ikea. Wal-Mart. I had a going away party where unexpected friends came. We ended up doing wheelbarrow races in the neighbor’s front yard in to the late night hours. We played under the flood lights in the Texas summer. We ate banana foster fondue. Andrea and Hannah sent me off to Germany. I spent my last day with my sisters. I got a charm bracelet. My mom got upset. My best friend left without a goodbye. I cried in the airport. I didn't have enough time to do everything I wanted to before I left. I flew to Germany. I met new people. I did language camp. I realized I was things that Prosper didn’t know. I learned to tango and I enjoyed it. I showed up half an hour late and disheveled to class after dancing in a drying room in Germany. Loved it. I became a new person that people rarely saw: I was loud. Always laughing. Very sarcastic and joking. Radiant.
September: I left my family of 4 weeks. I moved to Aachen. I got a host family. I went kayaking. I went to parties. I tried to learn German. I became quieter instead. I couldn't say little sarcastic things like I used to. I struggled in the background. I spent days stressed and way over my head. I started to grow up. Being 16 in Germany and being 16 in America have different meanings.
October: I went to Oktoberfest with Jana and was thankful for stupid things. I became “American Dream Girl” and “Sonnenschein.” I saw CBYXers for the first time and missed people I never cared about. We had an emotional break down in Mainz: a misunderstanding and a quiet Lissa. We got honest. I spent days playing with other Americans around Nord-Rhine Westphalia. I went to a tea party and ate oreos and chocolate chip cookies with Germans. My German got better. I taught people how to have fun dancing the American way, pulling out my best dance moves: the shopping cart, the lawn mower, the Q-tip. I started getting louder again.
November: I went to a movie with the girls and understood everything. I had a great night. I had a day with Anne where I complained and someone understood. I got a bookshelf. I printed photos and made my German room a little more like home. I started to get amazing German. I started to think and dream in German. I got annoyed with my friends here. I went to an American Thanksgiving. I picked out exchange students for America next year. I had a blast. I got sick.
December: I was still sick. I was home a week. My German skills started to suck. Josh was here. I loved showing Aachen off, I didn't like speaking so much English. I turned down Lyle’s birthday party. I met Alex in Köln. I spoke with someone in fluent in German for five hours that I had had countless conversations with in English before. I played in snow. I started ballet. I danced. I missed dancing. I bought a plane ticket to Sweden. I survived Christmas. I survived New Years. I say goodbye to 2009. I typed 6 pages in my journal.