The Countdown Commences

I left the States in late August of 2012 to embark on the European adventure of my dreams. I’m a very very lucky girl who has had the time of her life but, let’s be honest, I’m just a little bit ready to go home. May 18 will be the big day and I find myself daydreaming about smothering my family with kisses, suffocating my dogs with hugs, and convincing someone to take me to my all-time favorite Mexican restaurant to absolutely gorge myself… jet lag be damned.

Daydreaming about all of the people and things that I miss has been my best defense against a small but recurrent bout of homesickness that has been ailing me since Christmas. Ever the list-maker, I thought I’d share my Top 20 Things I miss the Most to celebrate my one-month-til-homecoming. And, no, I won’t be including people here because – let’s face it – there are too many of you. But you all know who you are.

20. Target – for obvious reasons
19. Drug Stores/Pharmacies – how is this not a thing here?? Who wants to go to 3 different stores for toothpaste, sunscreen, and nail polish? No one, that’s who.
18. Standing Showers – You’ll never know the limits of your flexibility until you figure out that you have to hold the shower head to rinse… and that the neck is about 4″ shorter than you.
17. Salsa – for obvious reasons
16. Cooking and Baking – buy extra large sweatpants now, family and friends; I plan on going all Julia Child on you!
15. Money That Doesn’t Look Like it Came Out of a Game of Monopoly – I miss you, George. And I’d really like to get to know you better, Mr. Franklin.
14. Foodnetwork Marathons – The dearth of food related contests in my life is pitiful. Also, I still plan on taking Anthony Bourdain’s job.
13. My Watch – it was on the list of things I didn’t dare to bring and haven’t yet ceased to miss
12. Nachos – no description necessary
11. Wawa – also for obvious reasons
10. Real Breakfasts – Despite nearly 9 months of toasted carbs and coffee to start the day, my stomach still balks and demands eggs, potatoes, yogurt, oatmeal, waffles, pancakes,… all the good stuff in real-person portions.
9. Having Disposable Income Again – enough said
8. Any and all Mexican food – see the opening to this post
7. Driving a Stick-shift Vehicle Down a Winding Backroad of Pennsylvania, Windows Down, a Close Friend in the Passenger Seat, and Jamming to This Song – just listen
6. Eavesdropping – there’s nothing quite like actually being able to understand people…
5. My Dad’s Sausage Egg and Cheese Breakfast Sandwiches – I’ve begun to drool…
4. To-Go Coffee – I admit that these Europeans really know what they’re talking about when it comes to a cup of Joe.. until you try to put that Joe on-the-go. Pitiful.
3. My Aunt’s Carrot Cake – more drooling… lots more drooling..
2. Señora’s Authentic Mexican Restaurant of West Chester – see the opening to this post. I plan on binging on their pineapple salsa ASAP
1. My Dogs – oh, Jack and Jill, how I’ve missed you so!
photo

Oh and that fabulous collection of friends and assorted loved ones that I have? Brace yourselves, because I plan on making up for every single lost minute of these past 8-odd months. This is not optional.

DSCN1367

Glorious Granada – Part 2

My flight from Philadelphia International Airport to Aeropuerto Granada was the stuff nightmares are born of. It started in Philly, where I learned that my airline ‘didn’t exist’ (cue first heart attack), then that the airline did exist but wouldn’t send my luggage all the way through (cue second heart attack), then that everything was fine.. until I got to Heathrow. There I learned that my flight to Madrid also didn’t exist (heart attack 3 – you’d think that I’d have learned by now..), then that it did, but that it had been moved until the next day (h.a. 4), then that I had 10 minutes to find it and board (h.a. 5 and 6). In the airport in Madrid I nearly missed my flight due to a misunderstanding of the change in time zones (h.a. 7), but did manage to get on that flight to spend the hour-long trip falling asleep with my head in the aisle and getting clipped by a severely irritated stewardess and her food cart… multiple times. In Granada they lost my luggage.

So, basically, I was not in the most positive of moods to start my semester in Spain. Then I went outside.

I came to Granada in early September, when Andalucia is arguably at her best. The sun was blazing, palm trees were swaying, and the air carried a cool breeze to counteract the tropical heat. There was no humidity. I had found paradise.

273

At Home in Granda

I lived in a home-stay in Granada, in a fourth-floor ‘piso’ (large Spanish apartment with multiple rooms) down on Calle Ángel Barrios (… which was about a half hour walk from school, but a ten minute walk from Botellon).

006

The room I shared with a fellow Arcadian was bright and sunny with a cactus-filled balcony that looked out onto a park. Our host-mother was this tiny blonde Spanish woman named Mercedes who would zip around every morning in a housecoat cleaning and cooking until lunch, then collapse for the rest of the afternoon on her couch, chain smoking and watching Spanish soap operas. Mercedes was a very… spirited woman. She and I had few problems, but she didn’t particularly care for my roommate, Sarah, who, among committing other Spanish Sins (she didn’t eat everything on her plate – ALWAYS), was a vegetarian. However, if one of us so much as had the sniffles, Mercedes had a full arsenal of medications that she could whip out at a moment’s notice. Add to this eclectic mix my host ‘cousin,’ Laura – Mercedes’ 18-year-old niece who vacillated between acting like she was 12 and acting like a delinquent, and the assortment of European students who stayed in the extra spare rooms for anywhere from a few days to a few weeks, and things were guaranteed to always be interesting en mi casa.

School (yes, I did go to school)

I went to school in El Centro de Lenguas Modernas (CLM), which is a division of the Universidad de Granada (founded in 1531 by Charles V, as long as we’re name dropping) and housed in a beautiful, sunny building near the heart of the city.

017

I spent the month of September taking an intensive Spanish course Monday – Friday, fours hours straight each day (a dios mío!). Then, in October, I began my real semester. Classes were held twice a week, Monday through Thursday, and I took courses in Spanish history, Latin American history, Spanish Grammar, Spanish Cinema, and (haha) French. It goes without saying, but all of the classes were held in Spanish (yes, even the French one).

Living la Vida Loca

A Spanish daily routine is truly something else, and it took me a while to adapt. To begin with, meals and mealtimes really threw me. Breakfast is usually something very light, such as toast with olive oil (yum!) and a coffee around 8 a.m. (or whenever you start your day). Lunch isn’t until about 2 p.m. or 3 p.m. and then it’s a huge, heavy feast (a typical lunch for us was a HUGE portion of paella, possibly some croquetas [essentially, fried mashed potato balls], slices of Manchego cheese, salad, and fruit) after which is an almost necessary siesta from about 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. Then dinner is around 10 p.m. and is usually something small but deep fried and filling. I spent about my first month in Spain continuously fluctuating between starving and stuffed… and then Sarah and I started keeping an impressive stash of chocolate and snacks (mostly cookies) in our room… after that I was almost constantly stuffed.
The Spaniards live their lives on a later schedule. Most shops and banks and what not don’t open until about 10 a.m. and then the whole world pretty much shuts down between 3 p.m. to 5 – 6 p.m… only to open back up and continue doing business until about 9 – 10 p.m. Spanish nightlife (and in Granada, nightlife is the lifestyle) doesn’t begin until about midnight, when one goes to a bar to grab drinks with friends. From there, sometime around 2 a.m., one goes to Botellon to ‘socialize’ more and, around 4 – 5 a.m. until about 7 a.m. one goes to a club. After that, one is supposed to stumble to a cafe to eat chocolate and churros before crawling into bed, but I never was able to make it that far.
So what did I do with myself when I wasn’t too busy studying? Well, three day weekends are glorious, and I usually took advantage of them to travel to some amazing places (See posts for October – December). I did experience a lot of the nightlife, of course, but one of my favorite ways to kill time was to explore the city. I loved walking up and down the river or wandering the streets, but one notable afternoon in Granada, my friend, Mariah (check out her blog here) and I decided to go out for hot chocolate… and ended up in the most adorable little bar with the craziest frozen chocolate mousses and a stellar chocolate fondue. What can I say? It’s hard to study abroad.

057

059