Wednesday, September 19, 2012
Royan Orientation....Trip of A Lifetime
Okay before I get to telling you about my amazing trip to Royan this past weekend....I have an announcement. I will be posting now on, religiously, every Wednesday. Yay!
Okay one more thing a quick story. My host mother happened to be gone this week....which left all of the driving around, school stuff, and (dear God) cooking to my host father. The first night my host father attempted a meal he made a microwave pizza, bacon, and meat from a can. The pizza was raw and cold and the bacon was rock hard, and the meat from a can....well was meat from a can. The next meal he completely gave up and brought home food from his private clinic. We ate patient food for dinner. Needless to say I am making dinner tonight....
On Royan
This past weekend was the first of five Rotary gatherings where ALL the exchange students in District 1690 come together and eat, complain, and most importantly laugh.
The weekend started with a 4 hour 30 minute drive from my home town of Ustaritz to our host city Royan. Ya Wen and I were the first students to arrive at the camp site. In fact we were there before the host Rotarians. So there we were one large American girl and one very small Taiwanese girl....looking like the odd couple standing in the middle of a bunch of RVs and portable homes.
Thank God we were saved by the head camp organizer who took us in his little go cart to our separate cabins. Here is some pictures of the cabins I took when we got there.
(The room three of us shared)
(Thats gonna be interesting....)
(Emily Anne Does NOT like small showers)
I tried to stay out of our cabin as much as possible. When all the students started trickling in we all greeted each other and exchanged pins. Each student needs to bring pins with them to exchange with other students. Mine are little American flags made out of safety pins(they went over great)!The meet and greet was moved over to the dinning hall where we were once again told all of the rules of being an exchange student (there is really only so many times we could be told NO DRINKING< DRIVING< DATING OR DOING DRUGS)
Then we retired to our rooms and like good exchange students we all went to bed early and slept all night. There was no "sneaking to others rooms" or "talking until 2 in the morning". Nope just good old sleep. That is all I can say about that night.
We all woke up bright and early the next morning...none of us tired of course because we went to bed early. Breakfast we followed with a flurry of activity. We were going on a boat ride! To an island! With a lighthouse! And a 1 mile walk over hard sand in bear feet! No but seriously....it was a long walk....and a bumpy boat ride. But the view was worth it...not really but the friends I made on the way was really worth it. I could not ask for a better group of people. I have never felt so comfortable with strangers.
(The Americans)
Part 2 Next Wednesday! Or sooner! Maybe Not!
Monday, September 10, 2012
The First Week of School...Let the Headaches Begin
I am just finishing up a study session with my favorite host brother Pierre. We were working on translation English phrases to French. I am pretty sure I learned more French than he learned English....helping with homework has many advantages.
1. Pierre seems to like me a little better each time we finish!
2. I always learn useful French phrases
3. The pictures in his English book are super funny....
So far in school I have had no homework....this is solely because within the week I have not yet had the same class twice.
Before I go any further I just want to say I have wonderful friends that help me whenever...and wherever I need them. I am just saying...when you get stuck in the bathroom stall because the locks are weird and three girls pull from the outside just to make sure you get out in time for class...that is friendship. I also love my school...they are one of the best in the regions and the teachers are super cool.
Okay now that that is out of the way. I can finally tell my loving, adoring, passionate crowd that French school pretty much stinks. I go to school from eight in the morning to six at night. I think taking this much foreign language might damage your brain....permanently. I get massive headaches(I have taken to carrying around tylonal everywhere I go) from all the French. I have a glorious English class once a week for two hours....its like heaven on earth.
I am taken from my mine field of unknown French words to an oasis of "English Only"
Hallelujah Chorus take it away:
When I first started school I was ashamed to tell my classmates that my school finishes four hours before theirs does. But then I started noticing something...hardly anyone plays sports(I mean like lagit varsity...practice every day sports), there is no choir, marching band, real art program, sports teams, or school clubs. All of my friends dont play sports...and they dont really have their hobbies well developed.
I realized that even our American school system is not as vigorous(and some what tedious) as our European counterparts, we have something much more important. Our students are more well rounded. I play an instrument, play a sport, I paint almost everyday and I firmly believe my education is as good as the rest of the students.
So what should society value more? I am not sure but I know from being in both situations I love finishing at 3:00 in the afternoon. When I finish at 6 I just feel like crawling into bed.
But, the other students make it it bearable...we whine and moan together to pass the long hours in the classrooms. We fan each other with our planners to beat the heat.
There is a light at the end of the tunnel. I understand a little more French each day. I can laugh and speak with my classmates. I can understand a little bit of my teachers lectures. And now I have now learned,with much pride, to tell the dog to GET OUTSIDE (in French of course)!!!
Au Revoir
Sunday, September 2, 2012
The First Few Days
I first and foremost want to say that my family is AMAZING. Especially my new host mom Blanca...she could possibly be a saint. She is so patient with my broken French.
Since I have arrived I have found out the most important aspect of the Halary's life is being active....which I had to become accustom to very quickly. On the first night right after we got off the plane we had what they called a "small get together" at their house. WRONG. It was a party. I sat in a corner....just about ready to die of fatigue, telling everyone all the while I was "okay"(HA). Day two we took it really easy...by easy I mean we awoke at 8 AM and started on the tour of the town by 9. They tried to explain to my the intricacies of a French meal.
"A French meal is about Process. First you have the meat, cheese, nuts, bread, more meat, and more bread. Then you have wine. Then you sit down an you have a salad course, with bread. They you have your main meal, which usually consists of meat (like duck, ham, steak, salami, or chicken) a starch (rice, pasta, THIS IS NOT INCLUDING BREAD)bread, and a vegetable. Then you have your fruit and cheese course (okay I have tried a lot of their cheese....let me tell you this, it might smell like a rotting corpse but it really tastes good!) Then you have dessert and some more nuts. Then MORE wine....and usually some other hard liquor."
I usually don't even make it through dinner before I start feeling like a stuffed Christmas turkey. Their ten year old son can eat more than me.
When we returned from our grand tour of Bayonne it was time to unpack. Blanca found me sprawled asleep on my bed a half and hour later. She didn't wake me up I just found her peering down at me,looking worried about my lifeless body. Though packing was not finished it was time for Blanca and I to prepare dinner. Really it was me watching Blanca moving like a ninja through the kitchen. She moves through that kitchen like a fish moves in water. Here is something weird, we dont eat dinner until 8 or 9 at night....I am usually starving by the time we get there!
After dinner I gave the whole family their gifts from America...which they all loved! Yay for See's Candy!It was off to bed for Emily Anne (by now it is 11 PM the family usually stays up past 1 AM including the 10 year old!)
Seriously though every person in my family has been amazing...they all try to speak English to me and they are always checking on me its almost like being at home...almost.
Here are some thing I miss
My Mother and sisters
The smell of the ocean (I have been to the beach here and I know it sounds crazy but it doesnt smell the same....)
Dry heat
Palm trees
My room
Panera
my rabbits
my birds
English
American radio (the French have some weird music)
my bed
my books
and a few other things
I hear it gets easier with time. The people here have made it easy to love France...I hope I have the strength to love it the way they do.
Here are some pictures of my new home
Side yard
The pool
Where we eat a lot of our meals
My Room....its huge
View from my rooms window
I am going to sign off for now next time I am going to tell you about our trip to the ocean!
Au Revoir!
Emily Anne
Thursday, August 30, 2012
The Epic Journey (Part 2)
16 hours in. N o food....no sleep....and a viscous headache and I still have two flights to go. When I got off the plane from my eight hour flight we were immediately on the move...I darted to catch up with a group of blue jackets...I cannot imagine anything more scary that being alone in a ginormous foreign airport by myself. We made our way across the airport to customs where they didn't even give us a second glance. We then picked up ALL of our bags at the carousel. Once our group got every last suitcase we pushed, drug, and rolled our suitcases to the nearest airport map. My heart dropped to my knees when I saw where the next terminal was. A long walk and two small train rides away.
(My Terminal)
I decided to face the 1 mile walk to the next terminal with two suitcases WITHOUT a cart....bad choice. Halfway through our journey those who chose carts had to ditch them. You know those annoying poles that prevent carts going places? Yes they were everywhere. And escalators. Do you know how hard it is to drag two suitcases and two carryon's up two little stairs? Not as hard as the girl who had four suitcases! This girl Melissa had a HUGE duffel that weighed 70 pounds. The strap broke in the middle of our walk and she literally dragged it the entire way to the baggage checking point.
I have to admit when we boarded the small train I wasn't expecting it to go 130 miles per hour. I goes from 0 to 60 in 4 seconds. The jolt was so incredible the girl in front of me toppled into my suitcases which caused them to send me flailing to the ground. The French thought this was quite amusing. I did not.
(From Escalator)
When we finally navigated to the bag checking desk we found out that in the Paris Airport all check ins are electronic. I put my passport in...once...twice...three times....Nothing. I was in tears almost instantaneously. Whether it was the extreme exhaustion or the inability to speak to anyone I don't know, what I do know is that it caused the airport staff to feel extremely bad for me. They ended up just checking my bags in free and sending me past security. Yay for crying(I must have looked super pathetic!)
This is the point where I had my first taste of France. I had Jambon et Rasin Pain and a chilled Citron. This is fancy talk for Ham on Raisin bread with a lemonade(in France everything sounds FANCY!). It. Was. Delicious. Even if it was airport food.
(The Cafe I ate at)
The next two flights were kind of a blur to me. I slept through most of the first one. I was so exhausted I boarded the plane and put my seat belt on (mom be proud!)and promptly fell asleep. I cannot even remember waking up. What I do remember is that when I woke up there was almost no one on the plane. Feel free to laugh. Thankfully my next gate was not far from the one I got off. The two hour lay over was just painful. I could not sleep because I could possibly sleep right through my flight. So I sat up watching War Horse on my ipod. It just made me more depressed. The last flight was the same as the first...except the seats were really small and I was stuck in a window seat. No prob. I'll just sleep.
(Air France)
Now here is where it gets really funny. When I finally walk down those final stairs to meet my family with open arms. There is no one to be seen....except a very weird old lady that smelled like onions. Don't worry the onion lady did not take me home. I wandered around to the baggage carousel and grab my bags...then I wander back to the front....wait 5 minutes...10 minutes....15 minutes....20 minutes....tears are coming....no Emily Anne calm down....look for information desk....ask where pay phones are....FOR GOD SAKE DO SOMETHING PRODUCTIVE!!!!!!
I marched over to the information desk and asked to pay phones in my broken French. The lady was nice and she told me she could call my family for me. I was about to give her the number when a voice came from behind.
"No not necessary. She is mine."
My thought at this moment......????????
Behind me is a small man standing in front of thirteen people. Six Rotarian's, three members of my first host family, and three people from my second host family...and Philippe Baumon the District Chairman. I am accosted with hugs and double kisses. Everyone is speaking French to me. I felt faint. It turned out that They thought I was coming from Paris because my host father forgot the itinerary I sent to him. Whoops. I get in the car and my journey is finally over. Good bye planes, annoying flight attendants, and bad in-flight movies. Until next year....until next year.
(Driving away from Biarritz)
Tuesday, August 28, 2012
The Epic Journey (like the Odyssey or the Aniead)
I am writing now from what only could be called the greatest marathon of all international travel. Here is a quick run down of my current schedule:
0330 Awaken from my dead slumber to drag myself down to the San Diego International
0630 My flight leaves for Phoenix and I fight off an ominous case of the “sleepies” (the sleepies can only be described as the intense desire your brain has for sleep while your body does not allow said sleep)
0745 Flight lands in Phoenix
0800 We are still not at our gate and my flight has started boarding
0810 Panic ensues
0815 I push my way past three couples and run to my next gate…like a crazy maniac.
0825 I am the last person to board my plane…literally
0830 The plane takes off for Charlotte
1030 Times get sketchy here because there is a time change…..I decide to nap through my confusion
1230 I am on a window seat and I desperately have to go to the little girls room…. My neighbors are not happy
1530 Land in Charlotte…realize I have not yet eaten today.
1545 Realize how big Charlotte is…stomach grumbles
1546 Realize my gate is D13 and I am at A4. Panic ensues
1550 Meet two exchange students on my way to my next gate
1640 Depart Charlotte….I think I feel a cold coming on?!?!?!
1645-2045 Continuous movie playing with no sleep
So here I am sitting in the largest plane I have ever seen writing my feelings. Feeling #1 I am so grateful my mother did this for me…. I miss her already. Feeling #2 My lips are super dry.
I am about to embark on one of the most defining experiences in my life…. And I can think of is I wish I knew more French…. Oh well what is school for anyways? Now I will make a list of the funniest things that have happened so far on my flights
1. I had my back pack on my back and I was walking through the aisle and I turned around to talk to the flight attendant and I promptly whacked some poor old lady in the face with my bag. She wasn’t hurt just slightly stunned by the sudden cloth to face ratio.
2. When I was getting on my international flight the flight attendant actually asked me if I new what a visa was…..I responded with “I should hope so because I have one.”
3. When I was getting on my first flight I was trying to stuff my beautifully packed carry on into the overhead bin when a flight attendant came over and snatched it from my hands and whisked it away to be checked…..goodbye delicious See’s candy I was looking forward to eating.
4. While sitting in one of my seats I felt a mysterious dripping only to find out it was coffee that had spilled in the overhead apartment directly above my head. I smell like cappuccino…maybe not a bad thing?
5. While going through security the zipper on my pants broke….Just imagine me running through the airport one hand on pants (pleading with them not to fall down) one hand on baggage…..its frightening.
My journey is not nearly over…..not even close I have two more commuter planes from Paris to Leon and then to Biarritz. Part 2 of the Epic journey tomorrow
Thursday, August 23, 2012
Visa....Mercy PLEASE
I used to believe that child birth is the most difficult thing in a women's life.....I was completely off the mark...it is definitely obtaining a visa from the French government. Besides the in-person consulate visit, that requires a great deal of sweat and tears to arrange and appear at, there is about 100 pages of documents that need to be gathered and collated. From health and insurance to bank records you name it people I gave it to the French consulate. I think I even drug in our kitchen sink for inspection.
Here is the good news.....drum roll please......I got my visa! But here are some mistakes I made on the way to getting it:
1. Listening to my travel agent.
To all you kids out there who want to get a visa and your parents are divorced.....don't listen to your travel agent when she says "you don't need the divorce papers!" You need them. Without a doubt you need them. They want to be really super sure you are not skipping out on your country without both your parents fully realizing your gone. Not France, try somewhere like Bosnia or a small out lying Indonesian island if your trying to run away.
2. Drive up to L.A. the night before your in person interview at 11:00 PM
Oh no you didn't....
I am embarrassed to say Oh yes we did. I am sure the consulate people thought my bloodshot eyes were beautiful.
3. Schedule your appointment for 9:00 AM
For some places this might not be a problem....but with rush hour L.A. traffic your going to want a nice afternoon appointment.
4. Wait until the day of your appointment to try to figure out what the building looks like.
I know the address...I really thought that was enough. NO. Get a picture people. We drove past it twice. and unfortunately that made us late and made me burst into a hysterical crying fit. Which made my eyes blood shots and watery.....
5. Wear a warm sweater when it is 90 degrees and the French visa office makes you stand outside.
I am pretty sure I sweated through my sweater....I was so disgusted I tried to throw it away....
Now here are some things you should do when visiting the French consulate.
1. SPEAK FRENCH
I know. I know. Everyone says it and in your simple teenage mind you think there cant possibly be a way it could affect your candidacy. Well simple teenage mind you. have. been. officially. blow. Four words in french got me in after I was late to my appointment: Je parle en Francais. The rather large black security guard melted like an ice cream cone in a L.A. summer. He even asked me if I WAS FRENCH. Why yes I am officer thank you for noticing......
2. Have ALL your documents collated.
They are not kidding kids. They really want them in the order they have them in on the website. The guys next to me was sent away.....:( (The girl he was with had an unusually large mole on her face and did NOT look friendly)Thankfully my attendant was polite and blessedly patient....
3. Wear a pretty dress
I think this is good advice for everyday....it just makes you feel more confident. I went in and I looked and felt like they were going to approve my visa...and they could probably tell. Just look nice they are more willing to give you a little slack.
4. Fix your hair
This goes for boys and girls. THEY WILL TAKE YOUR PICTURE FOR THE VISA....BEWARE OR BAD HAIR. You are going to have that puppy for a long time. Try to look good, maybe some earrings, a couple curlers, some heavy duty hairspray.....anything to make your pic look good. I am proud to say mie turned out just the way I wanted it to! Yay.
5. Be nice and thank everyone.
I was the only person in the place who thanked the security guard when we left. He said thank you and called me "Mon Cherie". This is a pretty good indicator that he is really under appreciated in his position. Although they might be tough on the outside those Frechies want to be appreciated just as much as everyone else.....seriously just thank them!
The task and of the visa caused my nails to be bitten to stubs, a serious crying fit, and A LOT tension within my entire family....but it is oddly all worth it. I am now able to go on a year long adventure! It might look like the impossible task with an annoying version of the song "the final countdown" playing in the backround....but trust me the rewards you will reap will be price less!
Au Revoir for now,
Emily Anne
By the way....that is a picture of the consulates door....it was super intimidating!
A family......Oh boy
We are now about to enter phase 2 of Emilee's Travels. I have just received my final destination. I am going to Bayonne France! I have a wonderful host family, the Halary's, and they have made this whole visa process worth everything! My parents are Blanca and Francois(such a French name I LOVE IT i think I might rename myself for France something, you know more fitting like Claire or Joan of Arc....) and they have five children two girls and three boys. The two girls are already off to college and an exchange in Japan so I have the opportunity of living with BOYS FOR THE FIRST TIME IN MY LIFE!!!
Sure it will be me blazing new trails for the Dellinger clan....but someone has to do it. I do have some concerns like:
1. Do boys smell as bad as everyone says?
2. Do guys really like watching things like spike tv and the Jersey Shore (*shudder)
3. Do they always talk about stuff like video games like xcube and gametoys? (I have literally never even played on these thing my mother believes it promoted the stupid in our youth....)
4. Do stupid and bizarre things like jumping off roofs and into giant mud puddles?
5. Do they all like getting dirty?
6.Do they really like to watch things blow up?
These are things I have observed and I am slightly concerned about....seeing as I don't enjoy doing any of these things (though I have had a dangerous addiction to the new "Snookie and Jwow show....I have to admit its kind of addictive)
Back to France. I am very excited....I will have more on my visa process (the long arduous, tedious, mountain of a task) very soon.
Au Revoir for now.
Emily Anne
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