Lauren & Brittney do Europe

Posts Tagged ‘airport’

The return

Saturday, May 8th, 2010

It’s 6 a.m. in Iowa– my  brain turned on like a light around 5:30 and despite my pleads and bargaining myself, I guess I’m up for the day.  Apparently it’s easier to fall into your sleep pattern when returning to the US from Europe, but in my little experience with it before, that is so not the case for me.  Also, I’m ravenously hungry.  All of my flights were for the most part on time yesterday, and I arrived in Des Moines at 10:30 p.m. to a ridiculously happy Savannah, and my dad who had come prepared with a can of Diet Pepsi and my new cell phone.  What a guy.  The bags under my eyes betrayed that I’d had about a combined hour of sleep during my entire 20-ish hour journey from alarm clock to baggage claim yesterday.  Upon arriving home, I was too excited to unwrap all my wares (mustard! chocolate! shot glasses!  …an odd amount of shot glasses!) to fall right into bed.  Once I did, I dreamt of nothing but airports, airplanes, and last-minute Mother’s Day gift shopping (which will happening some time today.)

I’m looking forward to many things this week, but am also quite frankly scared shitless of being thrust back into it all, and holy heartache, Batman– I miss Germany and D-Bag.  So much.  When I got to the US-bound flights terminal in the Munich airport, the American-ness was palpable.  So many overweight senior citizens complaining about the extra security or something they didn’t like about their bus tour of Germany, while sweating away in their Mickey Mouse track suits and visors.  Once we landed in Chicago and it was REAL, like real-real, yours truly wasn’t exactly bowling people over in the aisles to get my feet on American soil.  Let’s just try not and get salty tears all over your customs declaration form, okay Ma’am?  I guess this is my last post on the ol’ Iowa Girls Gone Wild; as we all know, you can find me here.  Good luck to Lauren in her return journey, but mostly with the whole saying of good-byes thing; it really does suck more than you could prepare yourself for.  WOW this post was much more Debbie Downer depressing than I’d planned on it being.  Overall, studying abroad was the BEST DECISION EVER and I MISS IT and it was GREAT, but I’m still REALLY hungry so will bid you Auf Wiedersehen, dear readers.  You’re the best (ok, you could have commented more.)  Thanks for putting up with my bipolarity and general uninteresting observations on all things about life abroad.  Time to go drink Diet Pepsi by the gallon and pee in public restaurants just because I can.

Ready or not…

Thursday, May 6th, 2010

….here I come, America!

I got a surprising amount of sleep last night and am already showered, caffeinated, and marzipaned with plenty of time to get to the airport.  It’s raining and gloomy; typical Germany refusing to give me one last sunshine-y memory.  One of my two suitcases is quite certainly overweight, and just maneuvering both of them through bus, train, subway, and airport is the greatest source of my anxiety right now.  Either way, in just over 22 hours I should be coming down the escalator towards my father and Savannah in the Des Moines International (giggle) Airport.  I’ve left my flatmates a lovely note (because that’s really the most fitting good-bye considering our relationship) and got enormous bear hugs from the Slovak and my other neighbor last night.  I suppose I’m as ready as I’ll ever be, OH AND GUESS WHAT– my friend Katie and I WON karaoke the other night (D-Bag and I left early.)  The prize is a 50 Euro tab to be used at the bar, so while I’m sad I wasn’t there to claim my prize or use it, it’s probably for the best.  And by “won” I mean they put all of the participants’ names in a hat and randomly draw a winner each week, so it’s not like the judges were super impressed by my coordinated and oft-rehearsed boy band moves.

AUF WIEDERSEHEN, DEUTSCHLAND!  ICH LIEBE DICH UND ICH WERDE DICH VERMISSEN!!

The motherload

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

I had a religious experience today.  My test went well, I signed up for our group trip to Berlin with only hours til the cut-off deadline, and still made it to the train station with about half an hour to spare.  I’d had a banana and orange with my coffee in the wee hours of the morning, but a rumbly in my tumbly started to grow around 10 am.  With time to kill and fresh Sparkasse Euros burning a hole in my pocket, I went to the bakery across the street from the Bahnhof for some caffeine and (hopefully) something almondy.  Oh baby, was I not disappointed.  First of all, this might be my new go-to hang out for all sweets and treats because it’s ridiculously cheaper than the bakeries occupying prime real estate in the center of town.  They also have quite the range of goods—from regular croissants to every frosted cake you probably can’t even think of, and lots of savory breakfast sandwiches as well.  I took more time making my selection than I do on most decisions of far greater importance, but in the end ‘twas perhaps the most life-altering choice I’ve made in almost 21 years.  It is called Marzipanzopf and it has changed my life.  I am not exaggerating when I say this braided delight was the size (length and almost width) of my forearm.  In fact, and write this day down in history, it was TOO big and I found myself only wanting at most half.  It was regular sweet bread dough, the impossibly intricate colonies of yeast proving its handmade and not machine-produced origins.  Sticky, almost clear marzipan slid between the strands of twisted dough (zopf means braid auf Deutsch) and it was all topped with impossibly sweet powdered sugar glazed and toasted almond slivers.  I needed some alone time with this thing. And yes, I realize I just described a pastry as if this was a smutty novel set after hours in a bakery backroom.  If I had been washing it down with a Diet Pepsi and not a Coke Zero, I’d make the bold statement that this was the single best meal of my entire life.  (But then again, I’m sure I’ll proclaim that after everything I put in my mouth in Bavaria.  My life is so hard.)  It took a while to work my way through it; my body needed time to produce the proper amounts of insulin lest my vision start blurring, I pass out, and miss my stop in Hamburg.

While I was sitting on the train, April sun streaming down on my face as I enjoyed the scenery of rural Germany, the ticket man came around (don’t worry, this part of the story ends LEAGUES better than my train voyage to Munich the first time.)  He asked for my ticket, which is our student pass that lets us ride (most) trains for free.  You also have to show picture i.d. to prove you’re not just using your friend’s pass (this will be a big problem for D-bag who is currently using my expired student pass to ride the bus around town—his perished in the wash.)  He saw my name on the student pass and said, “Ahh Brittney, aber nicht Spears!”  He was by far the friendliest German I’ve ever met on the rails, and he made a pop culture joke about my name and I understood it and we guffawed together.  What a touching intercultural moment.  I showed him my passport to verify that I was indeed Brittney not Spears, and he started to leave then did a kind of double take, “Sie ist Amerikanerin!”  Well yes Sir, I am aware.  He must just not get a lot of foreign kids on his train, or is either really in love with or secretly loathes Americans.  Either way, he left me alone after that, and I made it to the airport in plenty of time for my flight (even though I rode the subway here without a ticket and about had a heart attack just KNOWING I’d get caught.  In my defense, I did try, but the damn machine just printed me out a schedule of subways I could take and then BAM it was there and I didn’t want to wait 10 minutes for the next one.  D-bag and I got caught in Denmark being “Schwarz fahren” [without a ticket] but that was LEGIT we couldn’t read Danish and spent twenty minutes punching at the machine before deciding to test fate.  Thankfully Danish ticket men are a hundred times nicer than their Deutsch neighbors, and the man simply told us to get off at the next stop, but normally he was supposed to get us a fine of over $300.)

SO NOW, I’m hanging in the airport, my body craving vegetables or anything besides the pounds of butter and sugar I’ve fueled it with thus far.  In three short weeks, I’ll be here again (how I’m going to wrangle my two giant suitcases on bus, train, and subway then inevitably pay up the ass for one of them is still beyond me.)  Oh, a big THANK YOU to D-bag for lending me a duffle bag to use as my carry-on.  My backpack simply couldn’t hold my clothes, toiletries, Sebas’ yearbook, AND my laptop and hair straightener.  Last time I came I made the choice between the latter two, really like picking a favorite child I would imagine, but this time I decided I didn’t need to suffer.  I’m gonna go like walk around or pay 18 Euro for a water or something.  The inevitable sugar crash is imminent—perhaps I’ll get a quick nap in on the plane?

Update: I have made it.  To the beer halls!

Sugar! Caffeine! Productivity!

Wednesday, April 14th, 2010

I will try my best to refrain from using lots of bold and CAPS, but my blood sugar is at Seek Medical Attention Immediately levels of high, so bear with me.  Some friends and I just returned from our last CCC Meeting of the semester (coffee, cookies, conversation) and I overloaded on German cake, Girl Scout cookies D-Bag’s mom sent, and sweet sweet caffeine (at 7 pm.  So dumb.)  Today we talked about when people are going home, who’s ready to go, who’s freaking out, and what protocol is exactly for saying good-bye to people who you’re only ambiguously acquainted with.  The general consensus is that most people don’t want to leave, and even I have to admit, I DON’T WANNA GO.  We got an e-mail from the program director yesterday, “Things to do before you leave” and it was my first wait, whaaat? moment.  Here I’ve been counting down the days until spicy food and NPH and stores being open on Sundays, but it’s finally sinking in that I’m not just visiting America for a week again.  I’m going and I’m staying and this dream world I’ve been living in will be over.  Harumph.

In happier news, after my first Intermediate German II test tomorrow, I’m boarding a place to Munich!!!!!!!!!  I think we all know how in love with Bavaria I am, and there aren’t really words for how much I’m looking forward to a weekend of pretzels, Weisswurst, sweet mustard, beer, the Autobahn, and Sebas’ mama’s home-cookin’.  I busted my ass today to get my semester book project done– Monday’s the big day– so I can relax (HA) about it.  My teacher, bless her, is letting me take my test an hour early so I have plenty of time to get to the airport.  Turns out I LOVE airports now, my general thought process is if I’m in one, I must be going somewhere.  I’ll have almost four days of finally tolerable weather, and Sebas said we get to do WHATEVER I WANT because it’s MY weekend.  I like this kid more and more.

A new trend in my life I’m not a fan of: BAD SLEEP.  It takes me a while to fall asleep, then when I wake up I have NO idea where I am, what time it is, what day it is.  I’ve  had insanely vivid dreams since coming here, but lately they’ve gotten kinda scary (I woke up like dry sobbing the other night.  Nice.)  I always wake up at least an hour before my alarm, which I’ve at least been able to work to my advantage since there’s no going back to sleep.  This morning I went into Am Sande before class and walked around the Wednesday morning market.  Holy amazeballs.  This thing puts any farmer’s market at home to shame.  So many fresh flowers and vegetables and fruit and fish and meet and BAKERY CARTS.  I got a giant bag of dried apricots (or nature’s candy as Iowa Girl Eats says.  Couldn’t agree me) for only two Euro, seriously perhaps the best purchase I’ve made here.  I then headed over to one of the bakery carts for breakfast, and giant surprise, ended up with some almond-y.

Um, yeah.  It’s essentially a marzipan cookie, and the ends are dipped in dark chocolate.  Germany will officially be the death of me.  In my last three weeks, I have made a solemn vow to try every almond-flavored thing I can get my hands on– no easy task since the bakery cases are filled to the brim.  On my radar is a Spanish almond cake, though it appears to only be sold in five Euro slabs as big as my torso and well, if I’d like to keep said torso approximately that size, I should not be eating sheets of cake.  (Let’s be honest, people– that cake’s gonna mysteriously make it’s way to my WG by next week.)

Tomorrow starts my two-day blackout of social media (Facebook, Twitter– thankfully not e-mails) for a TNGG experiment. Expect a full Munich recap when I return– IF I return because yeah, it’s that great.  Now if you’ll excuse me, I have to go shower at my neighbor’s because the giant moisture-sucking machine of death is STILL in my bathroom.  Yes, it’s been a week.  No, I haven’t run this week because well, the world doesn’t need to be subjected to that if I don’t have a regular place to bathe after.  If I don’t go for a run when I get back I. will. diiiiiiiiie (I’ve become one of those people.  WHO KNEW?!)

Das Wetter ist sehr Nett

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

IT’S SO GORGEOUS OUTSIDE. I’m not one to usually get all hot and bothered by outdoors stuff, but after this winter (which the US Embassy informed us was one of the worst in Germany’s history) I just want to live outside.  The giant sports field about ten feet from my front door is finally drying out so we can spend our days and nights playing soccer.  It’s not even noon on Thursday and my weekend has started, I will definitely not be toiling away inside at my laptop.  My flatmates have all mysteriously disappeared, glamorous ski vacations in the Alps and such during their time off from school, but you will hear no complaints of this from me.  Spring is reminding me of Easter, which is oddly reminding me of my grandmother’s house (shout-out to Lin!)  We get a solid four days off for the holiday and methinks D-Bag and I will be heading to Dresden/ some of the smaller surrounding towns.  Sometimes I get really anxious that I haven’t been tons of places while abroad, but I like Lauren’s approach that I’m here so I’m going to explore here instead of trying to pack a bunch of 48 hour trips across the continent.

Germans don’t celebrate St. Patrick’s Day, but that in no way stopped us Americans from donning green and getting betrunken on a Wednesday.  We went to the local Irish Pub, which thankfully was also celebrating and had the green beer a-flowin’.  They were also giving out giant cloth Guinness top hats and had green “Tullamore Dew” streamers hanging from everything.  I now have a giant pile of these on my floor thanks to people draping them around my neck, making bracelets out of them, etc.  The hats were in hot demand and we nearly sparked an international incident trying to snag another before we left, but I’m proud to say one did manage to make it back with us, which D-Bag let me keep (or perhaps I’ve taken it hostage.)  There was some Irish guy with a guitar singing songs; he played some Neil Young, Lynrd Skynrd, and after asking the crowd for requests (big mistake) some Guns ‘n Roses.  Either he was drunk and sad or wanted the crowd to settle because “Simple Kind of Man” and “Patience” aren’t exactly party tunes in my book, but the crowd’s back-up vocals helped to liven them up, I guess.

I only have SIX WEEKS of class left which I’m sure will fly by.  Not exactly stoked about leaving Germany, getting back on Monday was a huge sigh of relief.  My body has fallen right back into my German sleep schedule, and as soon as I deplaned for my layover in Amsterdam my brain took hold of the language again.  Yesterday I met with my Sprachpartnerin (speaking partner) for the first time and we had a bilingual lunch.  Her English is much better than my German, but she was very patient with my “I know I know this word but I’m completely blanking out because I’ve never actually had to speak freely in German before” pauses.  My  brain hurt afterward, not to mention I was still wanting to say everything in Spanish.  We’ll meet up a few times before I leave, and if you’re wondering, I VOLUNTARILY signed up to get a speaking partner.  I do believe a pat on the back is in order for stepping out of my comfort zone.

Oh, after my creepy Senatorial stalking, the rest of my trip back was pretty uneventful.  I was less than thrilled to be sitting between two people on the 7.5 hour trip from Detroit to Amsterdam, but luckily miracles do happen and I didn’t have to get up once.  I watched The September Issue (documentary about “Vogue” and Anna Wintour– LOVED) and Paper Heart (lame pseudo-documentary about love I only watched because Michael Cera’s in it.  It was boring and his ex-gf who stars in it absolutely annoys the shit outta me.)  I got to sleep maybe four or five hours, mostly I’m just psyched that my passport has a shiny new Amsterdam stamp in it.  Off to lunch with my homeslices, or the ones who aren’t bed-ridden all day thanks to St. Patrick, and then OUTSIDE or Hamburg or something WITHOUT A COAT!!

Sevilla: T-Minus 24 hours

Saturday, January 16th, 2010

In exactly 25 hours and 19 minutes, I’ll depart from O’Hare International Airport in Chicago and head to Madrid (at which point I’ll sit in the Madrid airport for several hours, perusing duty-free shops and marveling at signs in Spanish, until I finally hop on my last plane for Sevilla).

I’ve been mentally mapping out my study abroad plans since I was in high school. I’ve literally waited years for this flight, and now that it’s finally here, I’m in denial.

Everyone’s question: “Aren’t you so EXCITED?!” Sure, I’m excited. But mostly I try not to think about it. Thinking too far ahead leaves room for me to begin panicking, like, “Oh shit, what if I forget to pack something crucial?” or, “What if something great happens in Iowa while I’m gone and I miss it?” (doubtful). There are a few things I’ll miss dearly, however, namely my family and my good friends between Iowa and Illinois. I also won’t have the opportunity to watch my younger brother perform a Lady Gaga medley in full drag at his high school talent show, and as you can imagine, I will be mourning my own absence from the event.

I’ve avoided becoming too excited or nervous about my trip by focusing on wholly trivial items and obsessing over my luggage. To give you an idea: I spent 10 minutes deciding whether to buy a pink or black umbrella at Meijer the other day (I went with black, it seemed like the classier rain repellent of the two). I also created a word document with a table divided into categories of what I need to pack. Yes, I am that anal. It paid off, though, because I’m only going to have one checked bag at the airport tomorrow. This is mostly thanks to my mother’s packing expertise, but I still think it’s an accomplishment that deserves recognition. I’m patting myself on the back as I one-handedly type this.

I think my excitement — and the full effect of my unruly nerves — will ultimately sink in tomorrow, after my family drops me off at the airport. I’ve never flown solo, so that will be an experience. Luckily I have three books, two magazines and a bag of Swedish Fish to keep me company. Until then, here’s hoping that I don’t slip into a panic attack at the terminal that ends in me sobbing so uncontrollably that I forget to board the plane. To everyone back home, you will be missed, but I will be here. See you on the other side.

I’m at the airport (YES! That one)

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

Holy schmoligans.  I am HERE.  Sitting in the Des Moines International (ha!) Airport, nary a relative in sight, passport and Euros tucked securely in my backpack at my feet– I really never thought I’d feel so liberated.  I’m like, an ADULT.  But before we get into how I have so much energy I feel I could sprint to Germany faster than my four flights will take me, let me wind the clock back for you…

Yesterday and this morning I was surprisingly calm– sleep came easily, I didn’t wake up in a cold sweat sure that I’d overslept (in fact I woke to two good luck texts, how quaint.)  Then I went to go turn on the light in the bathroom… AND IT DIDN’T WORK.  I flipped the switch in my bedroom, NO SUCH LUCK.  The power was out.  The ELECTRICITY to my HOUSE did not WORK.  In all the freak what-if scenarios I’d concocted over the last month or so, THIS WASN’T ONE OF THEM.  My parents were remarkably unconcerned about this.  Thankfully Mom hasn’t tackled dismantling the Christmas wonderland that is our living room, so I grabbed a candle and set about getting ready.  You may think showering by candlelight is romantic or relaxing.  WRONG.  Have you tried to pop a zit in only the faint flicker of a flame?  NOT THAT EASY (but completely necessary, I’m like a three-eyed freak– the Germans will think whatever is growing between my eyes is some sort of disease and the Obama administration hand-picked me to unleash biological warfare on ze fatherland.)  Sure, the inability to take any appliance to my hair cut down on getting ready time, but I really didn’t expect to make my first impression on Europe with a bush on my head.

ANYWAY, I suppose the whole throwback to Colonial times wasn’t so bad, and the ‘rents took me to Panera for caffeine, carbs, and free wireless.  We stopped off at a bank to buy some Euros, and over an hour and about three new bank accounts later we emerged (free Snuggie in hand!  Stop at your local Wells Fargo today!) and sped to the SPRAWLING HUB that I find myself in now.  My flight’s been delayed 20 minutes, I’ve been assigned a short piece I can hopefully pound out while over the Atlantic, the lady behind the desk told me I’m getting out just in time before a snowstorm.  Wish me luck!!

I’m at the airport! (No, not that one)

Monday, January 4th, 2010

Bienvenido to my official first post… from the Miami International Airport.  Please don’t put a bounty on my head when I tell you that before I leave for Germany (48 hours and counting– oh, so this is what a heart attack feels like) my family went on a cruise to Jamaica and the Cayman Islands over the New Year’s holidays.  As Lauren correctly speculated, there were numerous daiquiris and pool boys involved (and margaritas, busboys, bellhops…)

I suppose this would be a good time to inform you of my deep-seeded pure straight hate for all things have to do with aiports, airplanes, and flying.  So you can imagine how THRILLED I am at how much collective time I’ll be spending in the air before Friday.  I’ve already made peace with the fact that I will get zero sleep tomorrow night, the night before Deutschland.  I’m quite certain I will wear the wrong things, say the wrong things, eat too many of the wrong things (my language buddy e-mailed me that their primary food group is BREAD and I can buy over 100 kinds. OH OKAY.  I didn’t need to be able to see my feet when I get back to the States.)

I don’t speak German– wait, that’s kind of a half-truth.  My German vocabulary has expanded to the numbers 1-3 and 7 (SIEBEN!!), I miss you, sandwich, I love you, and the present tense of “they are swimming.”  So really I should just breeze through the 14 credits of German I’m taking over there (I’ll be taking the equivalent of two years of German at UI in one semester in Germany.  Pretty boss.)  The worst part will be not being able to text every thought to my best friends back home– well, that and the fact that everyone who’s studied abroad and imparted their wisdom has told me I’ll spend heinously larger amounts of money than I’m already planning to.  Which is just awesome because those wads of hundreds have really  been burning holes from under my mattress.

 
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