After realizing that I was off for the weekend after my 9:00 am class on Thursday ended, I decided to travel over the weekend. I spent the rest of the day downtown at museums in Utrecht, and bought a train ticket for the next day to Aachen, Germany. After waking up early and spending a full day in Aachen, including a tour of Charlemagne's palace and a stop by the Vaalsberg, the location in which the Netherlands, Belgium, and Germany all touch, I went to Maastricht, the Netherlands, for the first night of Carnival. Here's a quick video I made of the cities-wide Dutch and Germany Carnival celebration.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-JaCAiS0Lj0
Mickey Studies Abroad
My time studying abroad at the Universiteit College Utrecht in The Netherlands
18.2.12
20.1.12
...Catch Up
And that was a summary of my activities in Utrecht for the last few months. I've been adding to that document for some time, but never have enough free time to work on it as in depth as I would like. Given that I posted it without much review, please ignore anything that is grammatically incorrect or potentially incriminating that you might find. I'll do my best to publish more regularly from now on.
With that said, here is a quick recap of the last few weeks and my upcoming plans.
Pre-New Years: I returned to the US for a three-week period during which I saw friends and family.
Post-New Years: After a quick sojourn to Southern California, I went with my parents to Spain for two weeks. We traveled primarily in the Andalusia region of Spain, but began and ended in Madrid.
Now: I am back in Utrecht for another round of school. Most of my good friends left today for a school-sponsored ski trip in France and those not on the trip have, for the most part, not returned to campus yet. Needless to say, I am absurdly bored and lonely and will be spending my time cleaning, reading, and staying productive in whatever ways I can. I will be going to Germany for a brief trip on Thursday and then the following week school will begin anew.
On a side note, during the whole holiday I was being irritable and moody because I'm an angsty teenager (a quality I cannot claim for much longer given that today is my half birthday and I have six months until I'm officially 20). Though this isn't a great explanation of my behavior and there is a lot more to it than I will share here, I'm sorry for being an annoyance.
I hope this has been enlightening to those who are interested in my goings on.
With that said, here is a quick recap of the last few weeks and my upcoming plans.
Pre-New Years: I returned to the US for a three-week period during which I saw friends and family.
Post-New Years: After a quick sojourn to Southern California, I went with my parents to Spain for two weeks. We traveled primarily in the Andalusia region of Spain, but began and ended in Madrid.
Now: I am back in Utrecht for another round of school. Most of my good friends left today for a school-sponsored ski trip in France and those not on the trip have, for the most part, not returned to campus yet. Needless to say, I am absurdly bored and lonely and will be spending my time cleaning, reading, and staying productive in whatever ways I can. I will be going to Germany for a brief trip on Thursday and then the following week school will begin anew.
On a side note, during the whole holiday I was being irritable and moody because I'm an angsty teenager (a quality I cannot claim for much longer given that today is my half birthday and I have six months until I'm officially 20). Though this isn't a great explanation of my behavior and there is a lot more to it than I will share here, I'm sorry for being an annoyance.
I hope this has been enlightening to those who are interested in my goings on.
Catch Up
18/12 flying home; stress of getting to the airport à early flight, possibility of public transportation being shut down by snow, Sunday bus schedule, riding on the wings of Ingrid bergman
On the plane perpetual dawn (winning the race up north, but losing it when we get more southern. I write this while on the plane, where just as we seem to make little progress in escaping the unending sunrise, we seem to have just as little success making a dent in our flight time. So far I have written the better part of more than four thousand words, studied the Dutch language, slept, eaten, and watched an animated film about cars, and time is slipping by at a grueling pace….
17/12 and preceding days; total lack of sleep
10/12 Light trail; going out to the town in the evening with friends and finally traveling on the lit trail through the downtown area à we had seen parts of it in the past, but had yet to walk it properly until this evening. A fun experience, albeit a cold one, during which I reminisced with two friends from California about the time we had over the past semester in Utrecht and what we were planning to do upon our return home.
8/12 Summer school reunion and the opportunity to see everyone from the program for the last time, hanging out in the tunnel of the light trail, foreshadowing our later tour of the trail.
4/12 Writing
3/12 Writing
2/12 Double rainbow in the morning, winter wonderland later in the day
Horse rides, Santa, Ollibollen, pofferetjes,
28/11
Following another slow day with poor weather and still missing friends, I went through the motions and finished up some of the work left over from the day before.
I am afraid that when I convey my experiences with bad weather, I am really not doing it justice. The Netherlands has some of the most torrential rain I have ever experienced, along with some of the most profound thunderstorms I have ever seen. Though the previous week and weekend contained some of this extreme weather, the weather really wasn’t an issue until the fog set in. This was truly the thickest fog I have ever been in (which should not be taken lightly given that I’m from San Francisco). It reminded me of an old Scooby-Doo cartoon in which Shaggy cuts through the fog with a knife and takes a bite of it. There was actually a severe weather warning because it was so thick that visibility was limited to 30 meters. Anyway, it is surprising how demoralizing not being able to see anything is. Thankfully a few days later I stepped outside and found myself staring at the FC Utrecht stadium about a mile away. I was so taken aback by the sight of something so trivial and couldn’t for the life of me figure out why. It took me a few minutes of reflection to realize that my visibility was no longer limited and that there was a finally blue sky off in the distance. And I still had an essay to write.
27/11 Little bit of a slow start not aided by the fluctuating bad weather
Texts from Paris
A lot of writing
26/11 Planning on getting a lot of work done, the plan that always falls through
The following two days cannot really be seen in any light as a highlight of my time in Utrecht. Two of my friends and one of my very good friends had gone to Paris, leaving me behind to catch up on reading and write a research proposal for my comparative politics course. Though I was interested in the subject matter, a comparison of the influence of socioeconomic class and related factors in voting behavior between the US and UK, the overly empirical nature of the assignment, the shear amount of source material, and perhaps especially the unabatedly crappy weather, made it a feat to stay focused and finish my work. At the same time as I was suffering with my work, I was periodically receiving texts about the glories of Paris: the weather was great, the food was fantastic (especially relative to the Netherlands), and the city was a dream. I was suffering from the relative deprivation of such fantastic experiences, but paradoxically loved hearing from my friends. Needless to say, I was hardly motivated to work over this weekend and had to push myself to get everything done.
25/11 Pancakes, Isaac having trouble getting to the station, helping Kenji find dollar bill
After a particularly dreadful week, thanks in no small part to the atrocious weather conditions and lack of proper Thanksgiving, I was happy to relax with friends in the evening. Because of an open house for prospective students, we were saved a trip to our mediocre dining hall and were given bagged lunches instead. Ironically, the bagged lunches were of a much higher quality that what we had come to expect from dining hall, and though this was a welcome change, it would come back to haunt us later in the week. As it was black Friday, a day traditionally reserved for rampant consumerism, but perhaps more importantly a nice break from school, I was again surprised to be in class. My Fridays are traditionally a very relaxed day, with only one class before beginning the glorious weekend, but regardless of that it was still unattractive to be working on a day properly reserved for vacation. Additionally I faced a lack-luster presentation about Islamic mysticism in my World Religions course, made particularly unenjoyable by its delivery in a fragmented combination of Dutch and English.
Eventually the hour-and-forty-five minutes of class had passed and I was finally free to begin my weekend. On the agenda for the evening was a laid back pancake-making party. We went out boodschappen and picked up all of the necessary ingredients for the night, but as it was still early, we had a while to wait before food. It was at this point that the night to a slightly bizarre turn.
My friend Kenji (who misleadingly adopted a Japanese moniker for his English name) was hosting one of his friend’s from Hong Kong for the weekend. Her name was Dollar Bill. The first time she introduced herself, I was sure that I misheard and asked her to repeat it for me. Incidentally I hadn’t heard wrong and the English name she had given herself was actually Dollar Bill. Asking for a little more clarification to understand why anyone would choose a currency for his or her name, she informed me that it was the rough translation of her Cantonese name. The turn that the night took was her disappearance. Before you get alarmed, this wasn’t anything serious, but rather the worried actions of her diligent host Kenji. Dollar Bill had gone into town without the bike that she had planned to use and the bikes presence outside without her with it had alarmed by dear friend Kenji. When she didn’t answer her phone, Kenji jumped to conclusions of kidnapping and murder and quickly left for town with me at his tail to help look. After a few frantic minutes of making sure Kenji didn’t get into trouble himself because of his haste, I was called away to help another friend (from Hong Kong as well) who had gotten lost in the enigma of Dutch city-planning. I quickly found her and guided her the two blocks away to her destination (why she had so much trouble getting there I will never know) before returning to school.
Upon my return I ran into none other than Dollar Bill. We went back to Kenji’s room where his roommate Isaac (the final student from Hong Kong) was packing for a trip to Manchester. We sat down and talked for a bit waiting for Kenji’s imminent return. Once he was back, we picked up a lackluster dinner from dining hall (the kitchen had opened again because the open house had ended for the day, but we still weren’t allowed to stay and eat) and returned to their room. While Isaac packed, Kenji, Dollar Bill, and I prepared for pancake making later that evening. We stayed for a few minutes after Isaac’s departure (one which cut time very close and allowed for little leeway in the Dutch municipal transportation) and then left to our friend’s unit with all of the ingredients for pancakes.
Before arriving, we were called back to the unit by a frantic call from Isaac who had accidentally gotten on the wrong train and was on the other side of Amsterdam from Schipol Airport where he was catching his flight. We did the best we could to help him get to the airport on time, but with his already constrained time table, things seemed like they would go for the worse and he would miss his flight. Miraculously, Isaac’s flight was delayed by forty-five minutes, just enough time for him to get through security and make his flight. Thankfully, that was the last of the night’s craziness. Ironically enough, despite his mistake, Isaac had gotten very lucky. Soon after his departure, a countrywide error with train controlling had shut down intercity rail transport throughout the Netherlands. Thankfully I only had to walk across campus for pancakes.
The time was finally upon us. We went to the tower (the tallest set of dorms on campus), entered the kitchen, and began preparation of pancakes. I flipped on the TV to sports highlights and an episode of Top Gear and settled in for a relaxing evening of eggs, flour, water, milk, heat, and a little bit of powdered sugar.
Week
Remittent fog throughout the week, but began to subside by the end
Thought my bike was stolen, but it was actually just moved
Finally swept a volleyball game
Traction with the residence permit extension
Early/late nights à early mornings
Feeling ill
Thanksgiving; turkey? Cranberry sauce, mashed potatoes, a nice try, but really not the same as home (especially without Vietnamese food). No pumpkin pie, but a Dutch pie afterwards with friends. Making guacamole for the Spanish project (not a good combination with a lot of poor-tasting turkey)
Weird to have class on thanksgiving
Controversy with the pearl harbor party
20/11 Studying/writing/reading, boring day with a LOT of fog out, no sun all day and a range of visibility of maybe 20m
19/11 Nice night in, watching a movie, eating Brie and bread, and yogurt from a milk carton!
18/11 Shabu-shabu
Karaoke, other games
Bar for anthropology, making up surveys, Dutch
Party back at school
11/11 Bike repair, closed on Wednesday, back on Thursday, back on friday
On Friday evening went with friends on a quick train ride over to Amsterdam in order to watch the Dutch National soccer team play the Swiss in an exhibition match. As soon as we embarked on the train ride, the reality of the game was evident. People wearing orange hats, shirts, and an assortment of other garments surrounded us on all sides with those appearing less festive having merely concealed their support under garments for warmth. After the brief ride, we arrived at the station near the stadium.
Great area, freezing cold, olie bollen stand
0-0 soccer game, still fun
Massive crowd, but still not filled, crazy big crowd
12/11 The next day I continued my ritual of playing Frisbee and afterwards went into town
I picked up a Dutch lock for my bike at the market and installed it, veneration for not being able to replace my back inner tube because of a crazy bike, but more importantly, the lack of proper tools
We walked around, which was nice given that it was what we used to do when we had class downtown, retook some pictures
Music box museum
Astonished by the number of people waiting for Sinterclass in the domplein
Fresh poffrejes, taste/smell/look/skill of the guy making it
Waves of children running around and riding on parents’ shoulders
Zwarte Pete handing out papernoten from a big sack (used to throw them, discussion of how to say throw/scatter, special word for salting roads)
Sinterklass emerging, the mayor was there, everyone sang along
Returning home
With the French drinking, strange experience
5/11 Belgium
Early morning bus ride (very slow arrival of bus had us worried à Romania)
Three hour ride, meeting with Peter, cramming four into the back of a mini cooper
Good food, mussels/escargot, ice cream (coffee and speculaas)
Hostel, no room, last train 10:38 north part of town, Midi station outside of brussels
Hustled over to the nearest tram (intracity), scary buying the ticket/which stop
International travel ticket place close, all of the information people were gone
Better a trainstation to sleep in than the side of a highway
Couldn’t find the ticket, walk straight and turn left (walked around the building)
Floor cleaning guy (would he speak English?), not great direction but still on my way
Asked the baggage claim guy (it was him who you buy the ticket from)
I asked the guy and he said platform 16, train out of commission
Checked the board à 17
Was the ticket right?
Was the platform right à switched back to 16
Schipol delay to Utrecht
Up and down the escalator, not worried
When I left my bike was messed up, borrowed a bike
Walking home from Central station
Bus closed, walked home in the cold
6/11 Bland next day,
15 (13:30)-17 (00:30)/10 Hitchhiking
Many people there already, most sleeping, people still trickling in over the next two days, many gave up on it altogether
17/10 Walking around, up the peak on the funicular, rollercoaster
At the beach, more walking, eating on the beach after the supermarket (Spanish meats)
Two main bays
Plaza restaurant later
Great dinner near the plaza restaurant
Job, wake at night
Great food, great group
Little spanish
18/10 More good food, up to Jesus today
Job on Dutch News
Breakfast first, slow start, Walk up to Jesus, gorgeous
Quick escape
Sprint to the bus w/ peter, barely made it in time, nice bus ride
In Bilbao, unfortunately the hostels were at the other side of town
Trying to find an article about Job
A lot of walking, cutting through a nice park, strange but good architecture
More walking, past the Guggenheim
More walking, into the historical district, first two hostels booked
Alleged 1 star hotel turns out to be 3 stars, cheap night split between two people
Clean up for an evening out, no worries about property like in a hostel
Great room
First exploration around the immediate area, next to the opera house
Looking for a good place to sit down and eat
Waiting to eat ice cream until after dinner (missed it in San Sebastian)
Sitting down for dinner at 7:30 (getting a drink)
Kitchen doesn’t open to make food until 9:00! (Waiting, nice conversation)
Food finally arrives
Continued walking after dinner, places to explore the next day
Late night sleep
19/10 Guggenheim
Waking up in time to eat (little café next to the river) and then pack for the 11:00 check out
The room wasn’t really supposed to be as cheap as we paid for it and the price went up considerably the next day
Packing everything up and storing it at the hotel
Good walk back to the Guggenheim
Nice to retake the walk with a free hand for photos and without all of the bags to lug around, but still dreary out
Really bizarre but astounding architecture
Guggenheim was stunning from the outside and surrounded by interesting art installations (tulips, spider, fog, flowers)
Fairly heavy rain the whole day, but especially while we were inside the museum
The inside was a mixed bag with some interesting things, but generally odd modern art (some from san Francisco)
Near where we ate breakfast great spot for lunch, great cheap food, good drinks, and a fantastic upstairs lounge, dumbwaiter
Nice place to sit and review photos of the trip so far, warm/couches, cool bathroom
Plan to sleep at the airport (not the greatest idea, but it works in Latin America)
Shopping (for pants! FUN)
More walking around and looking at places we were at the day before that were closed
Weird fish market
Picking up the stuff
Finding a place to go for dinner and watch the football match between FC Barcelona and some team no one really knew of
Difficulty trying to find a TV
First getting hot tea and waiting there, changing, dinner still not open
No TV where we were, finding a new place with a good seat/food and a TV
Nice tapas, great place to watch the game
Older group of American tourists sits near us (embodies the American stereotype)
Fun game, unfortunately not a blowout
Nice people work there
Game finishes, still a little bit early, restaurant called a taxi
Arrival at the airport, making ourselves at home and printing out the tickets from an automatic machine (got to choose our seats!)
Getting ready to sleep on the benches (not so bad)
Got there right at 00:00
20/10 Being told that we actually had to sleep in the car rental area next to a freezing car garage, not long benches couldn’t really stretch out enough to sleep
Also making sure to watch the stuff/stay warm while we sleep
Woken up not only by the uncomfortable situation, but also by the floor cleaner
Get up at six to move into the main area of the airport
Finally getting some rest for our 9:30 flight
Going to the gate, food/sleep (recovering from serious deprivation)
Quick through security
Off to Barcelona airport
Quick walk around Barcelona airport, food, wishing we had time to see more of the city
Back on the plane soon after to return to Schipol
Off the plane and onto a train
Before leaving we headed outside to get my first taste of the Dutch holiday food Oliebollen (literally oil balls), FANTASTIC
Freezing outside, dark early, a taste of the Dutch winter and considerably colder than Spain
A nice train ride back to Utrecht, leaving each other
Walk back from the station in the cold (no bike because of hitching)
Dropping off stuff and going to dinner
No one back at school yet (servers asking me how much food I want! Not paltry portions)
Catching up on sleep 12 hrs, finally recovering from the deprivation caused by the hitching, late nights at the hostel and the hotel, and almost none at the airport
11.11.11
Long Delay
Well as I'm sure you have noticed, there was a bit of a delay in my posting over the last month. For the time being, let's just pretend October didn't happen. To make up for my slow posting, I have finally started uploading pictures to the internet. Here is the link to see them:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/mickeyboxell/
I hope this gives you a taste of my time so far in the Netherlands. I will try to get back on track with posting so it occurs more frequently than in the past month (although just by sharing this, I have already done much better than I did in the whole October).
http://www.flickr.com/photos/mickeyboxell/
I hope this gives you a taste of my time so far in the Netherlands. I will try to get back on track with posting so it occurs more frequently than in the past month (although just by sharing this, I have already done much better than I did in the whole October).
21.9.11
I started writing this on Sunday (now two Sundays ago), but a series of internet-related set backs and academic distractions, ie. homework, delayed my efforts to finish writing before today. Please read this post with Sunday in mind.
This past week was arguably the least eventful of any so far. My classes remain appealing, and despite their engaging nature, as academics often do, they are becoming routine and uninteresting for outsiders to hear about.
Yesterday was national monument day in the Netherlands, and as such, was the perfect opportunity to finally make our way to Fort Rijnawen. After a leisurely morning we grabbed our cameras and biked out to the countryside towards the fort. Before we left, my roommate and I both shed our jackets because of a shared assumption that the relatively nice weather would hold. Though I would like to be a good storyteller here and reintroduce the shed-jacket component of my tale later: ironically showcasing how our ill-informed decision left us drenched while walking around an old Dutch military installation, in fact it was the right decision and having been stuck with the striking eighty percent humidity in a jacket would have been much worse.
Our tour group was comprised of post-middle age people and a small number of children. Our guide was an eccentric old Dutchman wearing a period-appropriate jacket and hat, who graciously spoke to us in English each time following his narrative in Dutch. Though I frankly feel that the best part of the tour was the guide, the area itself was worth traveling to, and the view to the other side of the canal, to a place where we had stood longing to cross to the other side, was gratifying to say the least. The fort was still in good shape, unsurprising given that it was dated only to 1869, an early age for many European monuments. Despite its young age and the realization that this fort had never actually been used for combat, it still managed to have an interesting and at times sordid past. One example of such ignoble behavior at the fort was the use of its facilities for the execution of the Nazi’s prisoners during World War Two.
Throughout the underground portion of the tour (every building was built into a hillside or had one artificially constructed on top of it), I had fun hiding in pitch-black rooms, making spooky noises to scare the kids. Before I seem like a pariah because of my dark actions (literally and figuratively) the kids on the tour were old enough to actually enjoy the spookiness rather than be scared by it.
Towards the end of the tour we were given a choice of continuing on to the castle or leaving a little bit early. We decided to stay. Our decision was rewarded with the tour of the installation's "Castle", a massive military structure. Hopefully I'll have time to elaborate on this experience at a later date.
To save time while still expressing some of what I've done over the past two weeks
After the tour we went and played frisbee. It was fun, but by the time we started the sun was making its final descent along with the temperature. Also, since it was the first warm day after a rainy week, the ground was still a bit wet. All in all it was fun, but not of the same level of play as the week before.
Friday and Saturday of that week comprised Bartenders weekend. This event was a time for Europeans to finally learn how Americans drink by ingesting excessive amounts of alcohol.
On Saturday evening was a fantastic storm. It started off as dry lightning, which I though was novel, giving not only having rarely seen it in the US, but also because of its magnitude. I walked up the spiral fire escape staircase of our patio to get above the building and see the extent of the lightning. It was an amazing sight: three different sources illuminating the sky, one above the stadium to the south, one above the city to the west, and one above us. Because I was standing on a metal surface high above the ground, I decided for safety reasons to descend from my perch. Though in good literary fashion, I would like to tell you that as soon as I departed, lightning arched to the staircase and cause a brilliant spark, in fact I probably would have been safe to stay up on top of it and continue watching the storm. Fortunately my weariness was proven to be not entirely unfounded when the sky opened up and a rain poured down to us more ferociously than any of frequent and voracious torrents had before. The native Dutch and foreigners alike were astonished by the storm, and many ran out side to experience it first hand. Following a break from bartender's weekend, many participants went outside to have a smoke and relax. A courageous pair from the group decided that it would be a good idea to move the remnants of a very large tree, previously standing next to the dining that had fallen over in the fierce wind, inside of the building next door. Campus security quickly put an end to their escapades and closed down the bar.
The following day I spent hours in the library reading texts about the philosophy and innovations of the 2nd century Alexandrian scholar, Ptolemy, for a presentation I was scheduled to give that thursday. Aside from the actual execution of that presentation, I cannot think of anything of consequence that occurred that week.
Saturday I returned to the library with friends to read Tacitus' Germania, but unfortunately the only english translation was an old volume that had to be requested. Instead, I made origami and watched Top Gear in the library while my friends worked. The following day I went back to the library to actually study. Much to my chagrin, my request still had not been processed. This sad fact gave me an excuse to make more pragmatic reading choices and finish up books I was actually assigned. The evening after my Sunday library visit I finally accomplished something I'd been looking forward to for months. I biked with a friend downtown to the Pathe Rembrant bioscoop and sat down for a showing of this summer's masterpiece blockbuster, Rise of the Planet of the Apes. Despite, in true cinematic fashion, digitally editing the hell out of San Francisco to include the Golden Gate Bridge in every wide-angle shot, the movie was fantastic and will hopefully be the start to a new franchise.
Yesterday, after the end of my History of Humanities and Liberal Arts class, I went with my Art History class to the Catharijneconvent, the top museum for Christianity in the Netherlands. I saw some catholic and protestant stuff, it was cool, and I definitely didn't almost fall asleep listening to the never-ending monotonous tone of the guide. In all seriousness, it was a very well put together museum containing truly amazing artifacts.
Following the end of our tour and a brief sojourn to buy a sandwich, I briefly returned to my unit before biking to Olympos for a marathon volleyball session. Though I say marathon partly seriously, given that it was the placement round in which we had six consecutive games, in all actuality, there were many breaks in the five-hour period and the games ended after a time limit was reached rather than by score. We played poorly at some times and well at others and at the end of the day had gone 4-2. It should have been 5-1.
Good morning and good night.
4.9.11
The First Week and Weekend
This past week was my first one to be full of classes since our Dutch Language and Culture class ended in mid-August. I started off the semester with Political Science: State of the Art, a class about comparative politics taught by an engaging Turkish woman. Though I was initially apprehensive about it, having never taken a political science class in college, I warmed up to the idea of it after a discussion about dissatisfaction with political systems in our home countries. I won't elaborate too much on this, but the simple question spiraled into a revealing discussion about disappointment with the Dutch coalition system, an influx of conservative Russian Jewish people into Israel after the fall of the Soviet Union-and how they primarily vote along ethnic lines, and more political and cultural distinctions previously unknown to me (and I would assume, to most people). Another enticing part of the class was that, despite its size, I was the only Student from the U.S. in it (a rare occurrence and something especially great given the multicultural orientation of the class.
After my first class ended, I walked over to my second, and only other, class of the day, art history. The class had slightly fewer students in it than its predecessor had, which was remarkable given the incredibly small size of classes to begin with. As a brief aside, classes here are capped at twenty-eight with absolutely no wiggle-room, the whole school, around seven hundred people, is smaller than some of the large introduction-level courses at UCSB. Meanwhile back at the ranch, my art history class, taught by a Serbian woman with more raw feminine enthusiasm than I have ever seen anyone muster before (I would explain this further, but frankly I have no idea how to articulate a proper description of this teacher) turned out to be a perfect choice for me to take. The class focuses on a wide array of art styles and periods whilst weaving in a historical narrative along the way. The teacher is writing her dissertation on Dutch 17th century masterworks, one of my favorite types of painting, and plans to share her specific knowledge of this later in the course. Finally, there are even components of the class where instead of reading a text, hearing a lecture, or watching a slideshow, we actually get to practice painting ourselves and also will travel to the museums in which the works of art we study are housed.
Though art history class ended sooner than I would have liked, a surprise given the grueling hour-and-forty-five minute length, I was happy that my first day of college in the Netherlands was over and that I could once again relax.
The following day I had only one class, the History of Liberal Arts and Sciences. As my only history class this semester I was very excited to take it and do something I excel at. When I got to class and my teacher, an older Dutch gentleman began to speak I was greeted with the gut-wrenching remark that every student enthusiastic about a class dreads hearing, "I was just assigned to teach this class last week after the original teacher fell ill, and haven't had time to really prepare." Not only was this statement itself demoralizing, but the tempo of and timbre of his calculated style of speech was close to coma inducing. He then began to say that as a philosophy teacher rather than a history teacher, this class would be more about the context and development of educational concepts rather than the specific history behind them... Needless to say I died a little inside after hearing this. Finally, the teacher twisted the knife protruding from my chest when he revealed his nature as a Luddite and asked us to handwrite everything. Frankly I'm fine with handwriting and my script is so legible that it often gets described as girly or mechanical, but in an academic setting, the digital storage of notes and the subsequent ability to search specific words or dates at the click of a button is something completely impossible with an analogue medium.
The only other event of consequence on Tuesday was the information meeting about volleyball try-outs the next day.
The following day I had the last of my first class meetings, World Religions. A Dutch man who was raised in Indonesia taught the class. Because of his writings about Indonesian religious tradition, he was blacklisted by president Suharto and couldn't return to Indonesia until the military dictatorship ended in 1998. In contrast to my alleged history class, World Religions has a major history component, and seems like it will be both fun and enlightening.
Hours after class ended I went to volleyball try-outs. Unfortunately for me and the other involved, the try-outs were timed to perfectly eclipse dinner so towards the end I was starving. This was made even worse when I decided to stay past the end of practice to continue playing and when I got back and played basketball for another hour. Despite the fun I had, not eating before or after a lot of athletics, with the added bonus of compounded days of moderate sleep deprivation left me in a pretty rough state.
The rest of the week was more of the same: class, relax, eat, and sleep. Thankfully I only have one class to round off the week on Fridays, but this results in three classes on Thursday, which isn't my idea of fun.
Though the week was quite blasé, Friday afternoon and the whole of Saturday were both filled with the best weather I've seen throughout my time here. The sky was a brilliant blue with negligible spots of white dotting the periphery. The best part was that not only was the weather beautiful to look at, but it delivered some actual heat to those waiting below. Though Friday's class meant that I couldn't fully capitalize on all of the sun that was offered, I more than made up for it on Saturday by getting up early and going with a couple of friends to read and play Frisbee at the nearby Wilhelmina park. When we arrived to the park, we were one of only a handful of groups taking early advantage of the dewy meadow in the middle of the park. This wasn't the case for long. Throughout the two hours we tossed the Frisbee, two hours during which I became completely drenched it sweat (I know this may not seem like the most pertinent comment, but I have so rarely sweat in this country that you'll have to believe me that it is), people crept further and further into the field until it was more than three quarters full. Unfortunately for us, during the quick break we took to rest up and dry off from the intense Frisbee-ing, three separate groups of voetbal (soccer) players filled the gap of the field we left open and effectively killed our game. Despite accepting this loss as a reason to take a break, within the hour we were back to business and borrowed a soccer ball to kick around ourselves. Thankfully for me, after a reasonable amount of time the group tired of the degenerate foot sport and returned to Frisbee, a sport that utilizes the opposable thumbs evolution worked so hard to provide us with.
Following another bout of tossing the disc we parted ways and I went back to my unit to finally get some reading done. Unfortunately for me, but fortunately for the Gods of procrastination, the sun was still out by the time I returned, and for hours after, so my valiant efforts of studiousness were less successful than I would like to admit.
Being college, this past week was also filled with social drama that people seem to do their best to provoke. The details are too many to delve into at this time, but the culmination was a lecture from twelve until two o’clock this morning about how it’s wrong for me to not drink. Let me just share how much of a blast that was for me to experience.
And on a final note, I would really appreciate if they celebrated Labor Day here too and I had a three-day weekend to spend traveling.
26.8.11
Intro Week
This past week, including today, has been the introduction week for all of the new UCU students. On the first day we were split up into 'families,' groups of ten new students lead by three second or third year 'mothers' and 'fathers.' Though some of the activities, especially the frequent speeches by university staff members have been about as fun and engaging as falling face first onto a cactus, others have ranging from peculiar to genuinely fun. In regards to those latter activities, the second day was comprised of a number of group sports and culminated with a tennis-themed party. The group sports themselves were a mixed-bag. Ultimate frisbee was an enjoyable team-building sport, aside from the frustration of so many European kids who had never even seen a frisbee let alone thrown one. Basketball was another 'fun' sport to play: many of the participants had never played the sport and ran around without dribbling (the refereeing was a little lax to accomodate this type of people), others got overly aggressive because of the lack of strict rule-enforcement and starting checking and throwing elbows. On top of all of that, it was drizzling the whole time we played and the ball accrued a very respectable coat of mud. Aside from these inconveniences, it was still gratifying to finally play basketball again.
The evening before, each team created flags: a painted piece of fabric symbolizing the group. My group, group eight, had chosen the theme of 'Super 8' and painted a number eight with a cape and beams of light filled with the flag of each nationality represented by our group. Though for the time being we had enjoyed our flag immensely, little did we know it was going to be part of an activity that could only be described as pure evil. The flag game had no rules; or at least the leaders of the event had done such an abysmal job of conveying them, that nobody knew what they were. The goal was simple: possess as many flags of other groups as possible, and the only known rule was to keep the flag visible at all times. The complex part of the event was that it could occur at any time of day and getting the flags always devolved into a tug-of-war match relying on brute-strength and the compartmentalization of that part of your psyche that allows you to participate in civil society.
Needless to say, this activity resulted in innumerable cuts, scratches, and bruises, sore arms and legs, and even a dislocated kneecap. It was really, really fun stuff.
Some of the other activities that day including the 'hump race,' an activity utilizing a giant inflatable red rod that your team had to sit on and bounce through an obstacle course, a relay course on a bouncy house that although ordinarily easy, was next to impossible because of how wet it had become, and also a bike race where the rider had to race to a cone and back with a flat of beer in one hand. It is important to note that for hydration there was a stand of free beer available throughout the day.
Following our marathon sports day, on Wednesday we took everything much easier. We took things so much easier, in fact, that I really cannot recall anything of interest until the night time. As soon as the light outside indicated dusk was approaching, everyone went to their rooms to change into bar-appropriate attire. Our family biked down to the city center and began a night of bar-hopping or pub-crawling as it is better-known in Europe. After traveling to six different bars and clubs, eating french fries, and getting extremely hydrated, we went to a club on the canal. The club, along with almost every canal-level establishment, was built by hobbits. The entrances were all curved, and the ceiling short. The number of people crammed into the tiny rooms was astounding and led to a hot and uncomfortable time.
Yesterday we were treated to a city tour and fox-hunt, a Dutch activity similar to a scavenger hunt, but with people and clues instead of objects (I actually created a game similar to this while working at SFBC away camp). The fox-hunt began with a brief introduction from our 'grandparents,' those individuals with even more authority than our parents, who locked the gate to the school behind us and stated that the only way back in was to finish the hunt. Before they were finished speaking, something that would literally NEVER happen in an American school, and by that I really do mean NEVER - this isn't even like school-sponsored drinking never, but like NEVER, NEVER, happened. Our grandparent was distracted momentarily by a car driving by and blasting its horn. Three masked figures came out of the vehicle with guns and started yelling about an anarchist revolution before tying up and throwing our grandparent into the back seat. The lead anarchist then revealed that the only way to get our grandparent back was to complete the obstacle course. He returned to his car blasting the siren on his loud speaker, and sped off, followed closely by a school security car. I was dumbfounded. When the masked people first debarked the vehicle I desperately tried to fathom what I was seeing. My first instinct recalled what had happened in Oslo last month, but at the same time the event seemed to contrived. Regardless of my feelings, I kept reflecting on the fact that if an American College or university would have pulled that stunt, people would have sued the school for psychological trauma, neighbors would have called the police, and the actors portraying the anarchists would have probably been shot to death because of the realism of their weapons. With this in mind, I started the fox hunt.
I will spare you the boring details of the hunt because, as so much of its point was to familiarize the new students with a town I've been living in, and exploring every part of, for the last two weeks, I was a little bored and reluctant to have to walk everywhere when I had a perfectly sound bike to use. The two main highlights for me were the actors portraying a pimp and prostitute, another sight usually not affiliated with school-sponsored activities, and Tivoli. When we reached the city-center, we were greeted by a pimp, and his 'bitch.' Both actors, especially the pimp, played their parts quite well and were not too much fun to be around. Our task at this point of the hunt was to get the phone numbers of two people on the street. To accomplish this, the pimp picked on of the girls of the group, made her his 'bitch,' and walked around with her to get phone numbers. Though this activity was off-putting, it didn't leave me with as much dismay as going by Tivoli. One of our activities required us to go to an antique store and buy something for one euro and fifty cents to please our kidnappers. Next door was Tivoli, the biggest club in the area and the location of the next concert of a band I really like, Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeroes. Finding out about the concert so late I didn't have time to get tickets...
In the evening we had a brief break and then got ready for the 'White Party.' Contrary to popular belief, and to the racist attitudes of the Dutch, non-white people were allowed in as well. Before the party, I went with some of my friends to their's and another groups 'mixer' where we played drinking games. The first game used a children's game called 'stunt pilot,' where players used small paddles to keep a plane up in the air with a goal of protecting their chickens. The drinking component occurred whenever one of your chickens died. Though I did a poor job of describing it just now, it really was quite intricately made and fascinating to watch. The second game was called 'what the fuck' and was a more explicit of some of the games I used to play at Y-camp. In the end, the games were both quite fun and very useful for learning names. The only difficulty arose when I had to convince a room full of European kids that I actually was drinking while playing these game, and ended up repeated spilling beer on myself.
The evening before, each team created flags: a painted piece of fabric symbolizing the group. My group, group eight, had chosen the theme of 'Super 8' and painted a number eight with a cape and beams of light filled with the flag of each nationality represented by our group. Though for the time being we had enjoyed our flag immensely, little did we know it was going to be part of an activity that could only be described as pure evil. The flag game had no rules; or at least the leaders of the event had done such an abysmal job of conveying them, that nobody knew what they were. The goal was simple: possess as many flags of other groups as possible, and the only known rule was to keep the flag visible at all times. The complex part of the event was that it could occur at any time of day and getting the flags always devolved into a tug-of-war match relying on brute-strength and the compartmentalization of that part of your psyche that allows you to participate in civil society.
Needless to say, this activity resulted in innumerable cuts, scratches, and bruises, sore arms and legs, and even a dislocated kneecap. It was really, really fun stuff.
Some of the other activities that day including the 'hump race,' an activity utilizing a giant inflatable red rod that your team had to sit on and bounce through an obstacle course, a relay course on a bouncy house that although ordinarily easy, was next to impossible because of how wet it had become, and also a bike race where the rider had to race to a cone and back with a flat of beer in one hand. It is important to note that for hydration there was a stand of free beer available throughout the day.
Following our marathon sports day, on Wednesday we took everything much easier. We took things so much easier, in fact, that I really cannot recall anything of interest until the night time. As soon as the light outside indicated dusk was approaching, everyone went to their rooms to change into bar-appropriate attire. Our family biked down to the city center and began a night of bar-hopping or pub-crawling as it is better-known in Europe. After traveling to six different bars and clubs, eating french fries, and getting extremely hydrated, we went to a club on the canal. The club, along with almost every canal-level establishment, was built by hobbits. The entrances were all curved, and the ceiling short. The number of people crammed into the tiny rooms was astounding and led to a hot and uncomfortable time.
Yesterday we were treated to a city tour and fox-hunt, a Dutch activity similar to a scavenger hunt, but with people and clues instead of objects (I actually created a game similar to this while working at SFBC away camp). The fox-hunt began with a brief introduction from our 'grandparents,' those individuals with even more authority than our parents, who locked the gate to the school behind us and stated that the only way back in was to finish the hunt. Before they were finished speaking, something that would literally NEVER happen in an American school, and by that I really do mean NEVER - this isn't even like school-sponsored drinking never, but like NEVER, NEVER, happened. Our grandparent was distracted momentarily by a car driving by and blasting its horn. Three masked figures came out of the vehicle with guns and started yelling about an anarchist revolution before tying up and throwing our grandparent into the back seat. The lead anarchist then revealed that the only way to get our grandparent back was to complete the obstacle course. He returned to his car blasting the siren on his loud speaker, and sped off, followed closely by a school security car. I was dumbfounded. When the masked people first debarked the vehicle I desperately tried to fathom what I was seeing. My first instinct recalled what had happened in Oslo last month, but at the same time the event seemed to contrived. Regardless of my feelings, I kept reflecting on the fact that if an American College or university would have pulled that stunt, people would have sued the school for psychological trauma, neighbors would have called the police, and the actors portraying the anarchists would have probably been shot to death because of the realism of their weapons. With this in mind, I started the fox hunt.
I will spare you the boring details of the hunt because, as so much of its point was to familiarize the new students with a town I've been living in, and exploring every part of, for the last two weeks, I was a little bored and reluctant to have to walk everywhere when I had a perfectly sound bike to use. The two main highlights for me were the actors portraying a pimp and prostitute, another sight usually not affiliated with school-sponsored activities, and Tivoli. When we reached the city-center, we were greeted by a pimp, and his 'bitch.' Both actors, especially the pimp, played their parts quite well and were not too much fun to be around. Our task at this point of the hunt was to get the phone numbers of two people on the street. To accomplish this, the pimp picked on of the girls of the group, made her his 'bitch,' and walked around with her to get phone numbers. Though this activity was off-putting, it didn't leave me with as much dismay as going by Tivoli. One of our activities required us to go to an antique store and buy something for one euro and fifty cents to please our kidnappers. Next door was Tivoli, the biggest club in the area and the location of the next concert of a band I really like, Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeroes. Finding out about the concert so late I didn't have time to get tickets...
In the evening we had a brief break and then got ready for the 'White Party.' Contrary to popular belief, and to the racist attitudes of the Dutch, non-white people were allowed in as well. Before the party, I went with some of my friends to their's and another groups 'mixer' where we played drinking games. The first game used a children's game called 'stunt pilot,' where players used small paddles to keep a plane up in the air with a goal of protecting their chickens. The drinking component occurred whenever one of your chickens died. Though I did a poor job of describing it just now, it really was quite intricately made and fascinating to watch. The second game was called 'what the fuck' and was a more explicit of some of the games I used to play at Y-camp. In the end, the games were both quite fun and very useful for learning names. The only difficulty arose when I had to convince a room full of European kids that I actually was drinking while playing these game, and ended up repeated spilling beer on myself.
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