Friday, December 13, 2013

Days 10-13

I am shamefully lazy about updating this. Oh well.


Day 10: holy

Oh, hey Mt. Sequoyah. It reminds me of the church camp I went to.


Day 11: steadfast/steady

"Ein feste Burg ist unser Gott" literally translates to "our God is a steadfast fortress."


Day 12: hope

How can someone not have hope while knowing such beautiful places exist?


Day 13: justice

This building which looks like Gregson is a court of some sort.

Monday, December 9, 2013

Days 8 & 9


Day 8: wisdom

The Greek theater at the University of Arkansas. It reminds me of the knowledge I gained there, which will hopefully resolve itself into wisdom one day.


Day 9: delight

Pure delight is imitating The Sound of Music with some of your favorite people in Salzburg. The summer of 2012 was one long exercise in delight.

Saturday, December 7, 2013

Days 6 & 7



Day 6: awake

It's difficult to stay awake all evening when beautiful sunsets like this one are happening around 4 pm. By 6 it feels like the middle of the night...



Day 7: ready

My dinner is ready! (Or was a while ago. It's 11pm. Dinnertime is long over.) This took a while to make, but it was much more satisfying to know that I took the time to try a new dish.


Thursday, December 5, 2013

Day 5: flood


Every third time I go to watch a YouTube video, this is the ad I get. It's about the flooding that happened near where I live in Germany last summer.

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

ADVENT PHOTO-A-DAY

Oh my goodness! I was wishing that there was something like the Lenten photo-a-day for Advent...and today I found out that that is a real thing! Huzzah for Methodism!


As with Lent, I've got to catch up on the first few days, so here they are!


Day 1: go
This is the main way I go anywhere this year - with the Strassenbahn!


Day 2: bound

Through the power of flight, we're not bound to the same city or even the same continent where we were born.


Day 3: peace

Okay, this statue of bleeding Jesus is pretty creepy, but it's from the most peaceful church in Erfurt - St. Severi. It's right next to the Dom, but it's not as fancy so it's usually empty. I like going in there.


Day 4: time

I have a countdown going on my laptop to remind me that my time here in Germany is fleeting. Time's also relative, which is shown by the fact that it's almost 4 here, but it's only 8:47 am in Oklahoma.

And, of course, time isn't linear:

Sunday, November 17, 2013

The Magicians

On a whim, I checked The Magicians by Lev Grossman out of the library. (You can check out e-books from anywhere. Yay Kindle!)

It was really good, but really dark. I didn't quite expect the darkness. The book is about Quentin, a young man, who one day is invited to take a mysterious exam. The exam turns out to be an admission exam for Brakebills, a magical college in New York. Since Quentin is obsessed with Fillory, a Narnia-like land from an unfinished book series, he's really excited to learn that magic is real.

Unlike many other books I've read that deal with magic, the magic in this book is rather sinister with little to no redeeming qualities. I'm glad I read this book - it has a good message about being content with your life because having a picture of perfection in your mind is a way to go mad.

I don't really have anything profound to say about this book except it scared me. When the group's evil adversary shows himself towards the end of the book, I actually threw my kindle down and avoided reading it for a few hours. I considered locking the door to my bedroom last night. I'm not entirely sure when the villain struck me as so creepy, but it did. I wish I hadn't read the end of this book right before going to bed because the thought of a creepy magician sneaking in kept on popping up in my mind.

I think there's a sequel, but it's not available as an e-book so I'm probably not going to read it anytime soon. I'm not sure if I'd read this book again, but I'm glad I read it once.

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

VSFS Internship & the Shutdown

I'm trying to start working on my online internship with the State Department's Office of the Historian this afternoon, since I'm done with school for the week and need to get started. I'm also excited to work on this project since I'm researching diplomatic ties between the US and Germany before and during World War I, which I already know a bit about due to a course I took last spring. I'm starting out by looking up resources to further investigate, but when I tried to look up a source from the Library of Congress, this is what I got:


(Yes, all these tabs ARE necessary. I've got a different search result open in each one.)

I guess you could say the LOC website is...LOCked.

Friday, September 27, 2013

DOWNTON DAY!!!!

AHHH! Downton Abbey is back in the UK, and since my computer is confused as to where I am (when it asks to use your position, deny it!), I can watch it legally on itv's website. So, here come the spoilers:

1) O'Brien's gone?! I'm more shocked that Thomas had the ability to further his similarity to one of those robots from this SNL sketch.

2) Also the theme music was different, which I didn't like.

3) "Poor little orphan?" Mary, you're his mother. That means he's not an orphan. Also, was the royal baby named after Mary & Matthew's kid? (I paused the show to write this and the first thing Anna said was "He's not an orphan." Anna is my favorite.)

4) Downton has turned into a haven for single parents.

5) Mary was getting a bit far from the ice queen that made her my favorite Crawley girl, so I'm glad she's being cold and distant again.

6) MAGGIE SMITH.

7) This nanny is mean. Thomas is in the right...

8) I was hoping Isobel would just disappear back to where she came from before Downton...

9) The nanny called the baby "the little prince." It is Prince George.

10) Are Carson & Mrs. Hughes every going to get married?

11) "This is a man you sang and danced with. Do you feel nothing?" Okay, so Carson & Mrs. Hughes may not happen...

12) I usually hate it when Thomas is deceitful, but the nanny had it coming...

13) Poor Carson! Mary is being mean to him...she must be really upset.

14) "I suppose we were all young once." - Anna "You stayed young." - Bates
How old is Anna?! I wonder every episode. And she "stayed young?" Is she some sort of supernatural creature? That might explain her kindness and agelessness.

15) This new lady's maid. Is she the one who kissed Robert or the one who kissed Branson? It's hard to keep track of all these maids who kiss members of the family.

16) I'm going to try to stop blogging now because it's difficult to get a good flow on the show when I have to make snide remarks every 45 seconds. This will probably only last until the next time Maggie Smith shows up.

17) Answer to 15: Branson. Definitely Branson.

18) That's right! Go away, hateful nanny!

19) Aww...Carson & Mary are best friends again.

Summary: I need to buy a ticket to visit Highclere Castle in July as soon as tickets are available. I am also predisposed to like Gregson because I lived in Gregson Hall for two years...my room number is the name of this blog.

Saturday, September 14, 2013

Song of the Moment

Hey there from Germany!

I've been updating my adventures on my other blog, but writing about how much I love "Wrecking Ball" doesn't seem to quite fit the theme. I really really really love this song, but I will say that I haven't seen the music video because the rights are blocked in Germany.

However, I have seen a lot of stuff on the internet about the music video. It doesn't make sense to me. The song is brilliant; why would you need to make a sensational music video for attention. That would be more appropriate for a song that was all fluff and needed the extra hype.

Anyhow, my favorite versions of this song are the original and the Gregory Brothers' cover. Amazing.




My lack of culture is disturbing.

Thursday, August 22, 2013

Summer Reading

Hello, all! As my super-long summer vacation finally draws to a close (it's lasted almost 4 months), I thought I'd share the list of books I've read since graduation. As we all know, I had lofty goals for the summer and had several reading lists that were about a million books long. True to form, I didn't really follow those lists, but still managed to read 40 books. Here they are! Asterisks denote books that I've read before.

1) A Clockwork Orange. Not my favorite. And I believe it was on the Rory Gilmore reading list.
2) A Brief History of Montmarary. Such a great series!
3) The Lady and the Peacock. A biography of Aang San Suu Kyi, one of my favorite women.
4) A Season of Gifts. Richard Peck wrote a companion novel to A Long Way from Chicago!!
5) The FitzOsbournes in Exile. Montarary book #2.
6) The Great Gatsby*. I also read part of it in German, but I didn't finish it that way.
7) Rather Outspoken. I miss Dan Rather anchoring the CBS Evening News.
8) The Fault in Our Stars*. The movie's about to start filming! This book is the reason why I'm obsessed with visiting Amsterdam.
9) Rise, Let Us Be On Our Way
10) Islam: the Religion and the People.
11) The FitzOsbournes at War. The thrilling conclusion to the Montmarary saga.
12) The Perks of Being a Wallflower.
13) Bossypants*
14) Madam Secretary. Madeleine Albright is my hero.
15) The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight. Such a good read!
16) The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks. Not as good as I was expecting.
17) Pope Francis: His Life in His Own Words.
18) The Mystery of the Purple Pool*. Who doesn't love the Boxcar Children?
19) Top Secret America. This was on Kentucky's recommended reading list for their IR grad program. Although I'm not going there, I figured the books were still worth reading.
20) Dreams From My Father.
21) A Farewell to Arms. This wasn't as depressing as I expected!
22) Shakespeare's Sonnets. From the Rory Gilmore Reading Challenge
23) The Wisdom of Compassion.
24) From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler*. The reason I'm convinced my time in NYC would've been better spent at the Metropolitan Museum of Art than at MoMA.
25) Lean In. Another Kentucky pick.
26) Matilda*
27) An Abundance of Katherines*
28) Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone*
29) Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets*
30) Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban*
31) Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire*
32) Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix* I read my British edition that I bought in Rome in 2007.
33) Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince*
34) Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows*
35) Paper Towns*
36) 13 Little Blue Envelopes* Seemed like something a girl about to venture to Europe on her own should re-read...
37) Anna and the French Kiss* Same reasoning as the above.
38) Lola and the Boy Next Door*. I'm waiting for the next book, Stephanie Perkins.
39) Perfect Scoundrels*
40) Kiki Strike: Inside the Shadow City*

I also read Currency Wars, but I'm not quite sure when because I didn't write it on my list. It was another Kentucky pick. So it's looking like 41 books with a week to go in my summer vacation.

I moved back home around number 27, which is the reason for all the re-reads. I also read portions of Let's Go - Europe (while taking notes) and keep looking at my old German textbook.
I was in a bit of a funk after re-reading the entire Harry Potter series. I'll probably pull out my Beedle the Bard, Quidditch Through the Ages, & Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them sometime in the next week. I also stole and am wearing a t-shirt that belongs to my sister and reads "don't let the Muggles get you down," although I finally got over the series enough to change out of my Luna Lovegood-inspired earring combination (owls and purple stars). I'm currently reading Kiki Strike: The Empress's Tomb.

I'm leaving for Germany one week from today. I think I should be more anxious than I am; I've got a pile of stuff in my room, but I haven't actually started packing. I'm going to do that on Tuesday or Wednesday. Besides that, I'm mostly trying to eat a lot of Mexican food and pizza (German pizza is...underwhelming) and I'm drinking a Dr. Pepper any time I take a notion to! (But caffeine-free because it tastes better and doesn't keep me up all night. I don't really drink much caffeine.) I'm also trying to get up half an hour earlier each morning, which I doubt will make my jet lag any lighter, but makes me feel like I'm doing something AND makes me feel like an old retired lady because now I'm getting up early enough to watch CBS This Morning and the Today Show.

Finally, an important note: I'm going to try and blog on my Fulbright blog about things that relate to moving to Germany and experiences I have there, so I'll probably be posting on that for most of the next year.

Saturday, August 10, 2013

Sun Rice.

While searching for something in a box of souvenirs I brought back from Italy (I went in 2007), I found this baby bar of chocolate. Although it looks like a typical fun size candy bar, it has such a deep symbolic meaning for me. I got this bar of chocolate while flying from Rome to Frankfurt on a Lufthansa airplane. It was during this time (and during our layover at the Frankfurt airport) that I was first exposed to German. I was fascinated by these incredibly long words and the funny dots over some letters and the fact that "Dusche" meant "shower" and that the McDonald's served something called a "McRoyal." I also thought it was wonderful that the stewardesses wished us all "Auf Wiedersehen" as we exited the aircraft. This short exposure to German language and culture has defined much of my life and my future plans.


When I received this bar of chocolate, I never thought that I would major in German or even that I would return to Europe (much less move there for a year!). Since this product expired in 2008, I believe I will keep this forever in my shoebox of memories, untouched as the day I decided to keep it because I wasn't hungry for chocolate at 9 am.

Friday, July 12, 2013

Current Feeling


Taylor Swift lied...or maybe her life was amazing at 22 because she was rich by then. This is real life.

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Things Methodist Girls Like

Buzzfeed had lists of "Things Catholic Girls Like" and "Things Mormon Girls Like," so I figure it's just a matter of time before "Things Protestant Girls Like" rears its ugly head. It's bound to be inaccurate because Protestant goes from Episcopal to Primitive Baptist (it's a real thing - that's where my Grandma goes!), so I figured I'd make a list of things that Methodist girls like, based on my limited life experiences with other Methodist girls.

1) The Cross & Flame.
Seriously, it's like the coolest denomination logo ever. I absolutely love my FUMC shirt because it has a huge cross & flame on it.

2) Grape Juice


And we can tell when you're skimping during communion and didn't buy Welch's.

3) Harry Potter


4) Crosses on the top of tall places

Always the best day of church camp...

5) Advent

Because sometimes there wouldn't be little kids so your family got to light the candles.

6) Chacos

I know all Christian girls like this one, but Methodists are no exception.

7) Queso

8) Collecting loose change for Lent

And guilt-tripping our friends into giving us their loose change as well.

9) Any song written by Charles or John Wesley
I don't know what other churches sing because our founders wrote most of our music...

10) Friendship Bracelets

11) Lord of the Rings
And talking about how handsome Orlando Bloom was in the movies in the time between Sunday School and church.

12) Traveling


And visiting a lot of Catholic churches.

13) Cardigans

The sanctuary is always cold! Also this picture = travel + cardigan. 

14) The kite commercial.

The best commercial of all time.

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Foods I Can't Wait To Eat

I depart for Germany in 63 days, and I'm getting excited to eat food that tastes amazing and I believe is cheap because the Euro is worth more than the dollar.

Here is my list of foods that I will want to eat as soon as I hit the tarmac in Frankfurt:

1) POMMES. Americans don't know what they're doing here, I hate to admit. And for those of you who speak French, Germans have abbreviated Pommes Frites to Pommes and pronounce it with 2 syllables. THEY ARE SO LECKER. (Without anything to compare it to, it's hard to tell that I selected the "groß" photo because I plan to eat it all.)
2) Eis. German gelato. So amazing, and it costs 1 Euro per cone.


3) Apfelschorle. Fizzy apple juice and the apple juice doesn't taste like pure sugar like in the US!

4) A proper pretzel. Although I LOVE American soft pretzels a la Auntie Anne's, German pretzels are something else. Also it's acceptable cut them open and slather them with butter.


5) A McFlurry and a McChicken. It's nice to know that I'm just looking forward to eating a sophisticated meal at a train station...
The McFlurries have TWIX in them there. TWIX, people. I actually haven't eaten at an American McDonald's since before I left for Germany last June...so this could be a thing in the US by now. 
6) German Food. Probably should be higher up on the list, but whatevs.


7) Rittersport and Milka. Available in the US, but I don't feel like paying that much for something that coasts less than a Euro in Germany.
 

8) Bread. Bread that you would give up your first born child to eat again...you get to eat it for breakfast and sometimes dinner and make open-faced sandwiches with it.


9) Delicious spreads for your bread. Nutella, Karamell Zauber, and weird thin peanut butter that you have to stir before using.


 
10) Doener. I ate fake Greek food in NYC and it broke my heart because my two favorite things about Doener are the tasty lamb meat and the bread. Fake NYC Greek gyros are 99% weird veggies (not proper Doener veggies like tomatoes and cabbage) and are on pita, which doesn't even taste good. 

Monday, June 10, 2013

Meeting Arthur Darvill


Ah, New York City. Full of pigeons who don't understand where to defecate and foreign tourists. Although this city also made me feel like a foreign tourist. Anyhow, I went and saw Once and I MET ARTHUR DARVILL!! (I also did many other things, including seeing Mamma Mia! and Jersey Boys, hitting a guy with our bus, visiting the Empire State Building and MoMA, and eating the best pizza ever in the Village.)

This is how I felt when he walked on stage, then again when he started singing, then when he played the guitar, then again when I saw him, and finally when he signed my playbill:






I did not actually do this because there was a security guy there...presumably to keep the herd of nerd girls at bay. And there was quite a nice, orderly herd that waited patiently for Arthur to say hello to each of us. Our herd was unapologetically nerdy. I'd say it was about 150 people...about 15 people were waiting for Matthew Broderick to emerge from Nice Work if You Can Get It across the street. But we stood and talked and made friends (I mentioned that standing on my tiptoes to get signatures was bringing back my band calves and the guy next to me said "Oh, I miss marching band!"). I also heard a conversation start at "Who's your favorite companion?" and progress all the way to Starkid before the leads came out.

I have no picture to prove that I met Arthur Darvill; I'm trying to live in the moment and not let technology get in the way of my life. However, I did watch him take a selfie with another girl on the trip and it was adorable.


Saturday, June 8, 2013

Star Trek: Into Darkness

I finally went and saw the new Star Trek movie today. It was a momentous occasion for me because I'd never gone to see a movie alone before. (I have, however, gone to the theater with my family and gone to see a different movie alone once or twice.) Going to the movies alone is great. There wasn't anyone to laugh at me when I inevitable cringed and jumped because the sound was so loud that they probably heard it in space.

I also feel disposed that expostulate on my view that you don't need other people to be able to do things. Most of my friends went home for the summer; the remainder were working, "busy," or I knew they didn't want to see the movie, so I went alone. You don't need a significant other or a friend to do something that you want to do. I've been to the Farmer's Market alone, I absolutely love grocery shopping on my own, I liked seeing a movie solo, going to church alone is much more fulfilling than going with others (it minimizes distractions), and In the Heights was probably much better because I saw it alone and on a whim.

About the actual movie: Star Trek: Into Darkness is about Sherlock Holmes. He has become a Time Lord, but much like the Master he is bent on revenge. With Mickey as his companion, he destroys many buildings in both England and the United States because he is mad that he is the only one left of his race. Also the regular Star Trek characters are there as well. (Or so I'm told. My Star Trek knowledge comes from pop culture and the first film in this franchise. I also vividly remember my grandparents watching an episode the day my sister was born.)

I was under the impression that the movie was called Star Trek: Into That Darkness for quite some time. I finally realized that Into That Darkness is a biography of a man who was the commandant of Treblinka during World War II and, therefore, not an appropriate name for this movie.

I really liked this movie. I tend to like space-type things (Stargate, Star Wars, Doctor Who, (T)Raumschiff Surprise), so it shoudn't be a massive shock. One thing this movie made me think about was the ethical dilemma. You're not supposed to show yourselves to alien cultures so you don't change their destiny. But actual humans do that all the time. We expose cultures to advanced technology and train them to use it, and then we're surprised when war breaks out there because we didn't think about the consequences of our actions.

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

I'm Gatsby.

Upon reading The Great Gatsby for the tenth time and watching the film for the second time, I came to a conclusion (and it's not that I am not one of the only honest people I know): I'm Gatsby.

When I was a junior in high school, we read The Great Gatsby and everyone had to make a poster comparing him/herself to one of the characters. Being 16/17 years old, we didn't realize that we could choose a character of the opposite gender, so all the girls but one chose Jordan Baker and most of the guys chose Nick. Memorably, Trevor chose Tom and put a picture of himself with two waitresses at Hooter's on his posterboard and said "Tom had his ladies and I've got my Hooter's girls" during his in-class presentation. I, like most of the girls, chose Jordan Baker because I, like most people, didn't realize how shallow and, frankly, annoying Jordan was upon the first reading. (Fitzgerald is a genius. People like Jordan generally come off as interesting and you just get sick of them over time.)

While reading the book most recently, however, I realized that Gatsby had it right. I'm not into illegal trade, but I do try to give off the aura of being less small-town than I am and believe I'm destined for greatness. Unlike Gatsby, I'm not going to get stuck with some long-lost love. I'm not going to be derailed. This all sounds very stuck-up, but I'm watching all my friends graduate and settle and I don't want to do that. I'm terrified of that, and I always have been.

It's difficult for people to fall neatly into fictional characters, and Gatsby is by no means a perfect fit. (Although I've known a Daisy or two in my time.) All I know is that I'm not going to give up and move home at the end of a long summer. (Figuratively. Literally I'm going to do just that, but I'm moving to Germany afterwards.)

I'm going to hope. I'm not going to smash up people and things and lives. I'm not going to lie and be careless. I'm going to hope.

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Why are there so many boys at this prom?


At my senior prom, the only boys that were there came with dates, so the girls outnumbered boys 2 to 1.

I watched Pretty in Pink for the first time today. I mostly couldn't get past the part where Eleanor from Eleanor and Park had to be inspired by Andie. (Mostly the weird clothes/kinda poor/red hair/80s thimg.) The boy in that movie was extremely handsome. It's nice to know that James Spader has always seemed old. It wasn't a deep movie, so my comments are limited to spiffy one-liners.

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

The best screenshot ever.


April and Andy's faces exemplify the imminent threat that is my French final. However, I only need to pass in order to have an A in the class so their faces don't scare me!