Thursday, August 30, 2012

My First Irish Rainbow!

So Day 3---  What shall I say about the Irish thus far?  They are extremely pleasant!  Everyone calls me 'love' and offers to help me out.  I haven't had any encounters with grouchy Irishmen yet... except for that one middle school boy who drove by and flicked us off the other day.  That was very bizarre.  Other than that, it has been quite enjoyable here!

My apartment at Gort na Coiribe (or just Gort) is a single floor apartment with one single bedroom and one double bedroom.  We also have a bathroom with the TINIEST shower I have ever seen!  It will definitely take some time to adjust to, but in the end it gets me clean and that's all I care about.  Also, the water heater heats one tank of water between the hours of 4am and 8am.  So if/when you run out of hot water for the day, you have to turn a knob to 'booster' the hot water through the system so you don't take a cold shower.  Our kitchen is completely stocked with all utensils we may need.  Everything from pots and pans, to dishware and silverware is provided to us, so that is incredibly helpful!  We have a mini fridge that oddly enough does not get as cold as fridges in the States.  I have a feeling a lot of food will go bad fast in that fridge.  In our living room, we have two couches, a fireplace (I'm not sure if it is operational... I don't believe it is... but that would certainly be cool!), a kitchen table, and a TV.  Our TV has approximately 20 channels.... all of which are AWESOME!  Just try watching the British version of Jerry Springer... I believe it's called DNA Drama.  Incredibly hilarious.

My direct roommate in the double is an engineer at Nova!  She's pretty awesome if I do say so myself... Hi there Mary Helen if you are reading this!  We're trying to figure out ways to decorate our room since technically we can't attach anything to the ways with tape or hooks or anything.  We also have sorted out two tasks.  She turns off the lights at night since she's next to the switch, and I have to make sure the curtains are closed at night and open when we wake up since I sleep next to the window.

Our other roommate in the single is Lorenza.  She is from a little town by the sea in northern Italy.  She is learning English while she is here in Ireland, but already has a good grasp on most things.  We want her to teach us some Italian phrases in exchange for helping her become more fluent in English.  So far we have learned "agocha."  I don't really know how to spell it... but that's how it's spelled phonetically.  Anyway, it means "gulp."  So naturally, when one of the girls couldn't finish her Guinness the other night, anther girl on the program kept telling her to agocha!  I think our apartment will turn out to be very fun.  But more to come on that at a later date.

On Tuesday, we got off our plane in Shannon and the six of us on the flight took Bus Eireann to Galway together.  We went shopping in Galway for the bare necessities that we would need for the night (sheets, towels, toilet paper, and breakfast food) and then rested for awhile in our apartments.  That night we went out with the other students from Nova to The Quays (pronounced the keys).  It was an incredible place filled with lots of Irish students, International students, and locals.  The live music was beautiful to listen to and there were Irish step dancers performing for most of the night.

Yesterday, we explored the NUIG campus for awhile and ate dinner at Fat Freddy's in the center of the city.  On our way to dinner I saw my first rainbow of Ireland!  It was a full rainbow, too!  Isn't it beautiful?!


(Some of us at the River Corrib after dinner on Wednesday night)

Today was our first real day here in Galway.  Everyone in our program is finally here and we all went to Orientation together.  We listened a lot to the different opportunities at NUI Galway and received our student IDs.  Most people's ID pictures are extremely distorted, but mine seems to be fine luckily.
Tomorrow we have to continue our Orientation at 10am when we will learn about registering for classes.  For the next three weeks we are essentially having syllabus weeks.  We don't pick our classes until September 17th.  It seems so far off.  I just wanted to get my classes under way and figure out what my schedule will be like.

That's all for now!  I'll keep writing whenever I get the chance!  Off to dinner with the group at someone's apartment!  Slainte!

Monday, August 27, 2012

Hours Until Departure...August 27, 2012

"The utterly impractical, never predictable,
Sometimes irascible, quite inexplicable, Irish.Strange blend of shyness,
pride and conceit,
And stubborn refusal to bow in defeat.
He's spoiling and ready to argue and fight,
Yet the smile of a child
fills his soul with delight.
His eyes are the quickest to well up with tears,
Yet his strength is the strongest
to banish your fears.
His hate is as fierce as his devotion is grand,
And there is no middle ground
on which he will stand.
He's wild and he's gentle,
he's good and he's bad.
He's proud and he's humble,
he's happy and sad.
He's in love with the ocean,
the earth and the skies,
He's enamoured with beauty wherever it lies.
He's victor and victim, a star and a clod,
But mostly he's Irish—
in love with his God."

In about 12 hours I will be on a plane bound for Galway, Ireland for the fall semester of my Junior year at Villanova.  I've known that this day was coming for many months now, yet it still doesn't seem real.  The month of August has been such a whirlwind for me:  finishing my internship, visiting family in Massachusetts, New Student Orientation at Villanova, and now... Ireland.  With everything going on, I've hardly had time to even think about Galway.  

I guess I should say a little bit about myself and what I will be doing over in Galway.  To start off, I am a business major at Villanova, so you will have to excuse me if my blogging is a bit sporadic... I tend to write as I think and have a hard time organizing my thoughts properly.  Anyway, once in Galway, I, along with 22 other students from Villanova, will be taking classes at the National University of Ireland in Galway.  I am hoping to take five different courses:  Global Political Economies, an upper level Theology, a Management course, a Marketing course, and our required Irish Studies Seminar.  I'm so excited to be taking classes in another country.  I feel like that is the type of experience that will help define who I am and set the path for where I want to go in my life.

I hope that while I'm in Galway I will be able to enjoy the culture around me.  I have been reading up on the city and it seems like the perfect place to go!  About 80% of the population during the school year is students, so there will be lots of people to meet and lots of fun things to do.  They also have lots of festivals this semester including the Festival of the Oyster, which  I definitely plan on attending.  I'm also intrigued by their love of poetry.  Growing up, I always found comfort and inspiration in poetry.  Although I cannot write poetry for the life of me, I certainly love to read it and listen to it!  

Of course I will have to travel!  That is part of the reason I chose to go to Ireland.  It has such easy access to Europe that I simply cannot pass up the opportunity to go to places like Paris, London, Spain, and Italy.  Hopefully I'll be able to make lots of trips and really make the most of my time abroad.  I'm really quite excited for the whole experience of traveling abroad.  Not just being in the foreign country, but also getting there.  Everyone talks about Ryan Air and Cheapo Air in Europe.  I've heard some crazy stories, so I have a feeling that you will be reading some interesting tales of my journeys on these airlines.

The part of this adventure that I am most excited for is my living arrangement.  I will be in an apartment complex (that looks more like a condo complex) called Gort Na Coiribe.  Here's where it gets exciting.  Two of my condo-mates are female Irish students and my direct roommate is an international student!  I know absolutely nothing about them yet, but I cannot wait to meet them!  My hope is that they will be super helpful in showing me around Galway and be great resources as well as great friends.  I feel that this is what makes it a true study abroad program... being with students from other places of the world.  That's what it's all about, isn't it?

Okay, well I need to go finish packing all of my things! Yikes!  Keep checking back for updates and new stories.  I'll try to write as often as possible.

"May the road rise up to meet you, 
May the wind ever be at your back,
May the sun shine warm upon your face,
And the rain fall softly on your fields,
And until we meet again,
May the Lord hold you in the hollow of his hand."