Wednesday, November 12, 2014

The Fundamentals of "Making it Work"

Teaching abroad has continued to be an eye-opening experience (shocking...). Everyday I'm finding myself shoved out of the world of comfort and into the land of thinking-on-your-feet.  Bartending for the past two years taught me how to hustle and multitask, which has definitely come in handy during my first two months at school, but hasn't been a fix-it to even half of the scenarios I've encountered.

Some days, teaching English to Spanish speakers feels like trying to fit a square peg into a round hole.  I'm trying to explain in depth science topics with surface level English words, and trying to explain in depth English grammar and vocabulary with songs, stories, and my over-exaggerated arm movements (aka flailing). Through all of this craziness, though, I am becoming more and more flexible everyday... Which is a trait I can definitely benefit from.  Assuming that everything will go to plan at any moment in time will only lead to being let down, because well, life happens, especially in the 3rd and 5th grade English classrooms at my school in Mostoles.

So, here is my list of unexpected things to expect in an ESL classroom:

  1. Students occasionally breaking into spontaneous bursts of incomprehensible rapid-fire-spanish.
  2. Teachers consistently breaking into spontaneous bursts of incomprehensible rapid-fire-spanish.
  3. The heaters giving out at the same time that cool fall weather is kicking in.
  4. Being instructed to make a poster about 8 different types of invertebrates on a wall that has a fire extinguisher as a centerpiece.
    Voila! Made it work... Kinda.
  5. Hearing the word "rubber" upwards of 100 times a class, and the phrase "rub it out" even more often (spoiler... rubber is the equivalent of eraser).
  6. Being renamed "Mooh-Li" because "Molly" is too exotic of a name.  Or rather, being renamed "teacher."
  7. Wishing for 8 more arms 3 minutes after feeling utterly useless. And another 4 minutes after that feeling completely lost again and 6 minutes later leading the class in an in depth discussion on the difference between lungs and gills.
  8. Needing to translate Spanish students english vocabulary back into Spanish in order to decipher what they're saying.
  9. Living in constant fear of being caught speaking Spanish with the parents/faculty by your sneaky and suspicious students.
  10. Getting more excited than your students about breakthroughs in understanding grammar we take for granted... Like the damn third-person-singular present-simple addition of an "-s" on verbs. The students like to hug and kiss Miss Molly, but Miss Molly likes to stay germ-free, so she doesn't let them, and then they don't speak to her in English anymore.
Rant, rant, rant. It's all I do after a long day. Regardless of the amount of time I spend ranting, though, I feel infinitely more useful in front of classrooms full of wide eyes and jumbled brains than have anywhere else.  Sure I used to listen and bond with people while behind the bar, and coach students at the rink, and take care of countless children, teaching has always been my passion.  And though this is slightly (ha!) different than what I would expect back home, I am making it work. And there is nothing more I could ask for.

Friday, October 10, 2014

My Life: Underground


Ok, so due to the fact that I'm currently sweating on the metro, I found it fitting to break down how I feel about it. 
So I'll start by saying the metro is amazing, and particularly so in Madrid. Routes are simple, and rarely do I have to make more than one connection. I also have yet to be more than a 15 minute walk from a stop. All of that is incredible. I could even get super and cheesy and say, "I've got the city at my fingertips!" I hop on the metro near my house and 45 minutes later I hop off a few blocks from my school, wowee! 

That being said, I am so tired of being sweaty on the metro. I'm tired of getting OTHER peoples sweat on me on the metro (especially considering I pass the metro stop for the Ebola contaminated hospital daily on my way to work). I'm tired of the cathartic sensation that comes over me in each of the just-a-little-too-warm cars. And the persistent kink in my neck from constantly giving in to this sleepy feeling. 


I'm fed up with the metro cars stopping in between stations and just sitting. Especially considering the number of times I've come running down the stairs and had the doors shut in front of me. I mean, you won't sit at my stop for more than ten seconds but you'll take a break between platforms for a solid 2-3 minutes?! 

[And currently, as a punishment for complaining while on said metro, I have the lovely blinking message that, while sitting for 10+ minutes, making me later and later for work, says, "por averia en linea. el servicio de viajeros no se presta con normalidad. disculpen las molestias. gracias." A break in the line, REALLY?!]

And the worst part is, there is literally nothing I can do. I am completely and utterly dependent on this metro to get me from point A to point B on a daily basis. I live in a central area and have a handful of friends houses I can stroll to, but in terms of work, private tutoring, and making it to the rink, I'm a slave to MadridMetro. I've realized how completely spoiled I was with my access to a car at home. I guess the grass isn't always greener? 

I used to long for better public transport in good ol' Portsmouth, New Hampshire, but now I find myself daydreaming about quick commutes in the privacy of my own car. 

I met a guy in the town I teach in who was talking about loving his visits to the center, and how close it was. I laughed and said, yeah 45 minutes or more in the oven/metro, and was responded to with the simple answer of, no, 15 minutes by car. 15 minutes?! That's at least 45 more minutes of sleep I could be having EVERY DAY!

So, I either need a car, a friend with a car, or to make friends with said guy who has a car so that I can indulge in the quiet and breezy sensation of being in the comfy, padded, rounded seats of an actual, private car.  

So all of you reading back home, or from wherever, with a car parked outside or down the block, please, I beg of you, take a ride and think of me.  Feel the breeze in your hair, and the silence around you.  Breathe air that is (mostly) your own, and live without fear of contracting ebola from feverish looking, sneezing passengers.  Grip the wheel and choose your own speed.  Make your commute, YOUR commute.  God dammit, its completely irrational to lust after a car as much as I am right now… 

I guess getting to live in central Madrid is a fair trade for not having a car, I just thoroughly enjoy an excuse to complain. Especially when I can't physically see the person I'm complaining to rolling their eyes and becoming visibly disinterested.  So, sorry to my readers! I swear I've got some good stuff coming this weekend!

Wednesday, October 8, 2014

Teacher! Miss Mowry! Can I Go To The Toilet, Please?


[Now, let me preempt this post by saying that having less than two weeks of teaching under my belt and having only taught one private lesson so far, I am in no way, shape or form an expert on ESL classrooms, but here is my initial reactions to the ones I've seen.]

Last week officially started my endeavor of being an English Language and Culture Assistant by day and a private tutor by night.  Having worked previously in several classrooms during my time studying elementary education in college, I felt like I would run into occasional difficulties that were similar to the American classrooms I had been part of.  I figured, hey, whats the worst that could happen? I'll be learning Spanish in my free time, and teaching English to kids at a school.  I'll be going through the same difficulties of learning a new language as they are.  We'll be together in this struggle!  Well, well, well, Miss Molly, how could you be so naive (Speaking in third person?! What is happening to me)?

Aaanyways, I work in a bilingual school in a satellite city/suburb of Madrid called Móstoles.  This school is full of eager students, kind teachers, smiling faces, and a whopping 3 native english speakers.  That puts into our responsibilities about 100 students spanning 2 different grades EACH.  I was blessed with Tercera (third grade) with Mary Jo, or rather Maria Jose, and Quinto (fifth grade) with África.  I walked in on day one of my job and was flooded with get-to-know-you questions.
  • "What is your name?" --> "Molly!"… "Huh? Repeat" "Mawl-eeee." "Mow-dee!"
  • "What your favorite color?" --> "Errr, yellow?" "Amarillo, no?" "No, yellow…english"
  • "Where are you from?" ---> "Portsmouth, New Hampshire…? North of Boston…? Ok, Boston."
  • "Do you have any brother or sister?" --> "I have one awesome older sister named Emily…  Em-ill-eee." "Emehdee!"
  • "Who is your favorite futbol player?" --> "Tom Bra-shit- Cristiano Ronaldo!" "YAYYYY!!!"
  • "Do you like Casillas?" --> "Of course!" (Duh, obviously, he's from Móstoles.  Its basically unlawful to way no.)
  • "Do you have a boyfriend?" --> Uncomfortable silence… 
  • "Can I be your boyfriend?" --> More uncomfortable silence…
  • "Can you speak Spanish?!" --> "No! None at all! I only speak English." "Ella no entiende nada, jajajaja!" (Yeah, yeah, yeah, enjoy it while it lasts. I hear everything! And understand! Well, some of it)
I laughed and found myself yearning to know each of their names; each of their stories.  But rather than being solely excited, I was immediately overwhelmed with the magnitude of nuances in their speech.  The habits that had been created through years of only speaking english as a requirement.  And only speaking to people who had learned it in addition to their first language as well.  The same nuances I'm sure I have acquired from years of on-and-off spanish classes with mostly American teachers.  Its unbelievable how quickly our brains become hardwired to only make certain sounds.  Like rolling our "r's" or making a long "zzzzz" sound.  Or how accustomed we become to the rhythms in speech that we find; the longstanding hope that in order to make something plural or in the past tense, a single rule can be applied.  Within moments of finishing answering the questions of my new students, I found myself hating the english language.  Despising its rules and exceptions; its reasoning or lack there of.  

The teachers I worked with both were (and are continuing to) making incredible strides with their students, but the number of times that the reason for a certain spelling or pronunciation was, "thats just the way it is," pissed me off.  Not because it was a lazy answer, or an invalid answer, but because it was the RIGHT answer.  Enter the orange poster I stumbled across at the top of this post.  Like, what the fuck? What is english? How am I going to teach this?!  I started flashing back to a class on phonetics and phases of learning to read.  My instructor at the time would write a word one letter at a time, while we made the sound that word would make. For example…
  • C
  • CH
  • CHO
  • CHOI
  • CHOIR
Did you try it? And all of the sudden get to the last line and, without a beat, say CHOIR in your head flawlessly? How did you do that? Simply through recognition.  Its a word that doesn't follow the regular rules, and so, we memorize it.  After years of seeing strange vocabulary in textbooks, and hearing our parents say them at the dinner table, seeing them on TV, and overhearing them on the radio, they become ingrained in our minds.  But keep in mind, this takes YEARS.  Years in an environment that boasts high literacy of the language at hand.  And the reason I can see CHOIR and pronounce it flawlessly is the exact same reason why whenever I encounter rolling r's or long spanish words, I freeze up.  I grew up in a home that was endlessly rich in english literacy, and completely void of spanish.  

So now, back to my Móstoles kiddos, these brave little learners are not only broaching the acquisition of english in an english class, but in science and social studies classes as well.  The third graders are reintroducing the letter Z into their vocabularies through words like ZEBRA. They're describing elephants and snakes and tigers.  They're correcting themselves but not without finding frustration first.  The fifth graders are creating plant and animal cells, and labeling them with words like ORGANELLES (which, like my name, is tricky because normally LL=Y), and CHLOROPLASTS.  These kids are warriors up to battle with the ever changing rules of english language.  They focus and unfocus ten times a minute, not because they're poor learners, but because their brains are tired.  My brain is tired just watching them work.  I try my best to sit with every student for at least a little while, using 7 different synonyms of "I can see you're working really hard, good job."  

In the midst of watching this tug of war within each student between letting the english seep in, and letting the hope for consistent rules ooze out, I am in my own battle of figuring out how I can be of most help to both the students and the teachers.  I'm revisiting the art of choral reading, learning through games, and the art of conversation.  I'm googling flash cards and word searches, while trying to figure out how to explain why the phrase, "keep it up," has nothing to do with moving UP.  I'm filling flash drives with pictures because even if I were to say the word, "quarry," a thousand times I would still be responded to with tilted heads and a clatter of "sorry? repeat?" I'm researching common terms in british english so I can blend into their existing knowledge.  So I can make their british curriculum work for me.  I'm hopping between the roles of teacher, helper, friend, disciplinarian, and therapist looking for the perfect fit.  All in all, I'm feeling just as lost in my own language as they are.  

I think that undoubtedly this is going to the one of the most eye-opening years I'll ever have.  Watching the strides of the children as they wrestle with vocabulary and speech.  I look forward to watching them grow and develop; witnessing their struggle with two syllable words move those that have five. I'm antsy to experiment with different tools and modes of teaching, while still remaining within the curriculum.  All in all, I'm happy to simply be a witness to this kind of growth, but better yet,  I'm ecstatic that I get to be part of it, no matter how bumpy this roller coaster ride may be.

Monday, October 6, 2014

I'm Back! Lo Siento!


In lieu of having a brief blogging break, I have not had a break from the chaos of relocating abroad.  Though the chaos has been a mix of good and bad things, I am burnt out on the most basic of issues that I am continually facing here.  The fact that every time I try to change the water bill into my name I am faced with Spanish speakers on the phone who, upon being told that my Spanish is not great, will only speak FASTER (because that obviously will help me to understand what is being said).  And this catapults into my landlord –who I did not realize lives in COLUMBIA- spewing into the phone nonsense about the water bill not being in my name (even when I repeatedly ask for him to email me, because, I can’t speak fucking Spanish on the phone!). All the while, attempting to deal with all of this while having ZERO access to Internet except for the shitty data I have on my phone here.  I think in a past life I must have upset the internet gods because I am constantly dealing with an alarming amount of bullshit from companies who claim to have great customer rapport and speedy service (Comcast and Orange, this ones for you).  Despite setting my Internet up 3 weeks ago, I have yet to have a visit from a technician.  And of course, this technician literally plugs in the router that I’ve had sitting on my floor for almost a month, and then calls Orange and says, “Ok, turn on the service!” Why I can’t do this myself is baffling.  And every time I call I get an identical response of, “Looks like the deadline for getting it set up is approaching so you can expect a call soon!”  Clearly the word “deadline” has a looser translation in Spanish than it does in English.  Luckily (luckily?), I’ve had a lot of other chaos to distract me from these daily life annoyances.  Since my last post I settled into my new apartment, took an amazing weekend trip to San Sebastian, started working in a bilingual Spanish school, and went on my first date with a Spanish guy.


First off, VACATION! From the vacation I was already having… My Madrileña friend Rocio had invited me to go to San Sebastian with her the last week in September, and then about 30 friends that are also working as Auxiliars in Madrid invited me to do the same. So, YAHTZEE! I could say yes to both! The trip started off with my train buddy missing our 8am departure, and ended with the same friend losing her phone and us then tracking it through the not-so-scenic areas of the city, where we promptly found it ditched in a trash can next to a guy who had been the blinking dot on our map… The middle part though was unreal.  The scenic views, the pintxos, the sandy beaches, the WINE, and of course, the company.  We spent our days sunbathing, touring, and hiking, and our nights drinking with our toes either in the sand or in heels dancing to our hearts content.  Coming home from this trip was hard because it marked not only the end of a beautiful getaway, but also the end of spending our days together having fun. It meant the beginning of our jobs in schools scattered in an hour radius around Madrid.  Nonetheless, we had to start this chapter eventually.


On October 1, I officially started my career as an Auxiliar, aka an English Language and Culture Assistant.  Though I only work 16 hours of classes/week, my schedule is Tuesday-Friday from 9am-4pm (talk about a long lunch…). I woke up on my first day, headed out of my apartment bright and early at 7:30am, boarded a nearly empty metro, and made my first (of what will be many) 1-hour commutes to work.  Due to the fact that the sunrises around 8/8:30am now, I like to consider my hour commute to be another hour of sleep, and when I stagger out of the metro at 8:30am, my day is actually starting.  With literally no idea of what I was walking into, I wandered into a familiar feeling school surrounded by palm trees, murals, and hoards of children screaming and giggling in a slur of Spanish and laughter.  I found myself in the teacher’s lounge where I met another American auxiliar who had worked in this school the year prior.  Shortly thereafter, we were joined by a third Irish auxiliar, and finally, by our director, Pat.  Within 30 seconds of meeting her, I knew I would grow to love her and the English team at the school.  She let us know that the fourth auxiliar was having surgery and wouldn’t arrive until November at the earliest, and for that reason our schedules would be jumbled for the first month.  So I’ve been wishing on shooting stars, sleeping with a spoon under my pillow, and learning to pray, so that I might not have such a wonky day full of breaks that are far too long.  My lunches range from 2-3 hours in length and are followed by one 45-minute class before I can go home.  And some mornings I teach for an hour, then have an hour and a half break before one more hour of teaching, followed by 2 hours lunch.  The term “condensed schedule” has the equivalent of winning the jackpot to an auxiliar, and of course, I don’t tend to ever have the lottery-winning kind of luck that some of my friends are blessed with.


Regardless of the not-so-desirable schedule, I lucked out with two awesome teachers to work with.  I spend about two-thirds of my time with Miss Mary-Jo (the English version of her Spanish name, Maria Jose) in two third grade classrooms, and the other third of my time with Miss Africa in two fifth grade classrooms.  Mary-Jo reminds me of teachers I have had in the past, who laugh and smile and throw their hands on their hips when they’re annoyed.  She plays games, is patient, and seems very human, which is sometimes a hard quality to find in a teacher.  Africa is young (I think younger than me) and brings a fresh vibe to her classroom.  She uses a lot of the teaching techniques that I remember learning in school.  I was impressed by the energy both of them, along with the other English teachers, bring to the school.  After hearing countless stories of teachers who only work out of the textbook, it was refreshing to see teachers who cared about their students.  Alongside my teachers, I teach the students language arts, science, and art, all in English.  The array of children is shockingly similar to those I’ve taught in the states: they are kind, witty, curious, mischievous, funny, and unique. Some need more help than others, and some need more work than others.  The kids who finish first and those plotted to finish last are equally likely to become a distraction to those in the middle.  I’ll be excited to see what the teachers decide to implement for behavior control in the classroom and how much I’ll get to experiment with from my work at home.  All in all, I have an interesting year ahead.


Back to the home front, I settled nicely into my new apartment.  All it took was two exhausting trips to Ikea, several visits to Chinos that were crammed with junk (Chino is the, I SWEAR, official term for shops that are the equivalent to a 7-Eleven or Rite-Aid back home), and a few stops into the funky shops on my street that I’ve already grown to love (Hema, Tiger, Høsten, and so many more). With a minimally furnished apartment, a terrace above a wood fired pizza oven (hello to never needing air fresheners!), a handful of friends living within a 3 block radius, and internet (hopefully) on the way, I’m starting to feel a lot more at home in this far-from-home place.


Now, onto what you’ve all been actually reading for: my first Spanish date. The week before leaving for San Sebastian, my friends and I all felt that it was utterly necessary to go out every night as a final hurrah in Madrid before school started.  Our first stop of the week was Independance, a Madrid club that hosts a weekly event called “Fuckin’ Mondays.”  The name should have been a warning enough that the night might take on a mind of its own, but we paid our 5€ anyways.  Inside there was a lovely pit for dancing that was covered in broken glass, and two bars with lines that were far too long. Alongside my friend who was equally smitten with Spanish men, I elbowed myself to the front of the bar.  Within moments we were both pounced on by Argentinian men. Overwhelmed by their slurred Spanish and the strong drink in my hand, I backed off and motioned over towards a safe corner of the bar. In my recluse I sipped on my vodka-something, laughed at the drunken dance moves in the pit, and tried to decide what to make of the night.  Enter David (dah-veed): tall, quiet, and seemingly innocuous.  Feeling the effects from my mystery drink, I was given an entirely new Spanish confidence.  I was suddenly fluent (or so I thought). In hindsight, I think he was laughing because I was making zero sense, and not because I was correctly conjugating verbs into witty jokes.  We chatted for either 5 minutes or 30, still not sure.  All I remember is suddenly realizing how late it was and how tired I had become.  I gave him my number, hopped into a cab alongside my friend, and slept until noon.  I awoke to an entirely Spanish text, which roughly translated to, “are you who I am looking for? I spoke to a girl last night and I want to see her again.” Uhhhh, maybe? Sure? I should also admit here that I didn’t know his name, and I wouldn’t find it out until we had already been on 2 dates and I texted to ask how he spelled his name.  Due to the fact that he isn’t an idiot and his name is fucking DAVID, he caught on immediately to the fact that the issue was not the spelling, and was actually my lack of memory from god damn stupid fuckin’ Mondays.  Back to the good stuff… We met up two days later, and shockingly, did not recognize each other immediately.  This was either because we were drunk when we met, because I had a quarter life crisis and dyed my hair brown the next day, or a combination of the two.  Likely the latter.  We spoke primarily in Spanish, with spurts of English, or better yet, Spanglish.  I learned that he grew up near Santander (the northern coast of Spain) in a pueblo with around 30 people.  I found out that his shaggy hair used to be a ponytail that matched his parents and siblings, but being a “city boy” he was the first to cut it off.  I realized we were both fans of cold weather and low-key nights.  And I also came to the realization that communication is infinitely harder when your native language isn’t shared.  After two dates, I don’t know that we will be able to navigate this cross-cultural relationship, but my god, is it fun to figure out.  The number of things that were lost in translation, or perdido en traducción, was staggering, but the number of constants between languages and countries was surprising.  David has promised a picture the next time we meet that will either be the first of many or the one reminder of my first Spanish date. Either way, entwining my life in every aspect of Spanish life has been a rollercoaster and I’ve only been here one month. 

So, for a corny ending to a post that started in a sour rant, here’s a little Mark Twain…

“Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn’t do than by the ones you did do.  So throw off throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover."

Thursday, October 2, 2014

School's in Session!


And once wifi is up and running (if that ever happens), I'll finally update you all on the latest excitement in my life as
a Madrileña.

Monday, September 15, 2014

Hoy es Domingoooo!

I'm finally getting to kick back (a little, tiny, tiny bit) and enjoy Madrid.  One week from now I think I will be even more relaxed, but for now, I'll gladly take what this Sunday Funday gave me: Peace of mind.  I was initially very skeptical as to whether or not I would be able to make this town my own, but I'm starting to find the nooks and crannies that I fit into perfectly.
Attempting to navigate Rastro's crowds
I started the day off by, most importantly, sleeping in.  Afterwards, I wandered down to El Rasto, one of the largest flea markets around.  I cannot even describe the magnitude of people that were crammed into the streets of the La Latina and Embajadores neighborhoods.  In the future, if I want to get aaaaanything done at El Rastro, sleeping in won't be a luxury that I can enjoy.  Stalls were filled with vintage clothing, tapestries, jewelry, leather bags, and endless amounts of various knick knacks.  Definitely will be somewhere I'll return once I'm happily in my own home.

The day before my adventure to El Rastro, I did some thrift shopping in my new neighborhood, Malasaña. Mercado Fuencarral was one of the funkier places I found.  Vendors rented out different stalls within the three level Mercado, and most were refurbished or original vintage pieces.  Between Mercado Fuencarral, El Rastro, and the magnitude of other Tiendas de Segundo Mano, I might actually come up with a pretty fun wardrobe here.

The entryway to Retiro
Back to the Sunday Funday adventure… Ran into a million and a half people from my teach abroad program while we were still wandering the thrifty streets, and decided we needed to get into the polar opposite of the area we were in.  We ran into a local grocery, bought some fruit, salad, cheese, and wine, and made our way to the Parque del Buen Retiro. Despite forgetting blankets, we laid in the grass for hours.  Our group fluctuated in size as people joined and departed, and we happily enjoyed our quiet afternoon solstice. This park was easily the hardest place to pry myself out of since arriving in Madrid.  It reminded me of the ease of life back home at my parents lake house.  The kind of place where you could sit around for the entire day without a worry (which I currently seem to have too many of).

Ended the day by attempting to get into an Irish sports bar to watch the Patriots with one of my fellow Boston-lovers (that lovely lady in the picture below…), only to discover that they weren't open on Sundays.  The search will continue for the New England sports venue, but I'll save that to be an adventure for another day. For now, more wandering! And more tapa-ing and clara-ing (clara: god's gift to Spanish beer… a splash of lemon soda in the shitty local draft)!

Lauren in all her glory


Friday, September 12, 2014

Donde esta mi casa?!

Apartment hunting is normally something I enjoy. You get to meet with people, see a bunch of properties, pick one out, write a check, and boom! You're home! To say my feelings have changed about the hunt in the past four days would be a harsh understatement.  In Madrid, half of the people showing the properties don't speak a word of English, and there seems to be no set standard on how much a deposit is, whats included, and the level of cleanliness is that constitutes "livable."

Thus far I've viewed:

  • A beautiful apartment with a bed in the wall, but its windows look out on a nearly basement level view of concrete.
  • A huge studio great light that had so much built up dirt you could barely see what color the floor was, and was situation across the street from a gigantic gay club. My favorite part of this one was the landlord trying to explain to me (in Spanish nonetheless) that during the day it was tranquil and luminous, but at night you had to seal the windows and use sound proof curtains to keep the club noise out…
  • A funky attic apartment with a window in every room (unheard of), that was on a fifth floor with only narrow staircases (no elevator…) and no air conditioning.
  • A tiny apartment that, if I were able to do a split, I wouldn't have enough room to do so.  
  • A fantastic studio with a lofted bed, spanish style tiled bathroom, hydromassage shower, and everything else wonderful that a tiny studio can have.  But that later changed the date of the rental on me, and said I would have to wait two extra weeks to move in. Argh.
I'm sure more than half of my complaints seem like I'm being too picky, but after spending the past 10 days living out of a suitcase and the past 5 days living in a 62 year old woman's home, I'm getting restless and quick to snap.  

Unfortunately, for now, all I have is a rant. No resolution yet. I'll keep ya all posted.

Monday, September 8, 2014

Mi Casa es Tu Casa

First day of much-needed spanish classes today! Aaand second day of my home stay with Maria Rosa. As of right now, every day that I've had in Spain has been significantly more interesting than the last.  Whenever I think I have my bearings, the rug is pulled from under me.  I think that all of this disorientation is creating a sense of self-reliance that I wouldn't have been able to forge on my own.  I'm honing my ability to make the best of any situation.

Yesterday, I stuffed the rest of my belongings back into my suitcases, shimmied big-red (my gigantic wheeled bag) into a packed elevator, and hustled down 7 flights of stairs with a human-sized backpack to meet my bag on floor 0.  I walked out from the stairwell to complete and utter chaos.  70 auxiliaries stood with their entire lives in suitcases waiting to meet their home stay families.  Significantly winded, like, panting-can't-even-speak-english-winded, I immediately heard my name.  Maria Rosa, my 5 foot tall, 62 year old señora, waved Morgan (a super sweet Alberta native) and myself to the door, grabbed me by my bicep, and dragged me out to the taxi stand.  She unsurprisingly spoke 100 mile/minute Spanish and refused to slow down or give up on us responding to her with our limited vocabularies. Needless to say, we were overwhelmed.

This angle actually makes the room look big! Woo!
Upon getting our multitude of bags out of the taxi and into her apartment, we were cozied into a teeny-tiny room, instructed to unpack our suitcases, and told lunch would be in 30 minutes.  I think my immediate reaction and response to Morgan upon the door shutting was, "what just happened?!" We quickly unloaded into the the small closet and slid our suitcases under the bed, simultaneously debriefing one another on our lives.  Quickly becoming friends and comrades, we decided to embrace the situation we had on our hands.  Lunch was a traditional meal of ensalada rusa (potato salad with peas, carrots, peppers, tuna, eggs, vinegar, and mayonnaise), a leafy salad, fried pork (I think thats what it was?), and watermelon.  At the table, only spanish was allowed, which was hard for us, but clearly more difficult for our down-the-hall japanese roommate.  We did our best to clear our plates, and retired for siesta. I slept like a baby.

Olives on olives on olives at Mercado San Miquel.
Leaving the house at 5pm, Morgan and I walked the streets of Madrid for 6+ hours, stopping only for a glass of wine or tapa when we needed to refuel.  We wandered through nearly every neighborhood of the city, falling in love with the livelihood of La Latina, the bars of Lavapies, the hustle-bustle of Sol, and calming quiet of our own neighborhood for the next two weeks.  El Mercado San Miguel quickly became a new favorite for me with its wide array of seafood, wine, fruit, olives, and much more.  I indulged in a green olive stuffed with smoked salmon and feta cheese, and washed it all down with a glass of Torres chard.  Hours later I had a glass of Tinto de Verano, a refreshing and simplified version of sangria, which was, of course, served with a tapa portion of ensalada rusa.  We finished the night with yet more wine and a staggering plateful of fresh grilled vegetables with sautéed goat cheese (STOP IT, I know, too delicious).  

Oysters!
With nearly blistered feet, we limped home with full bellies and a whirlwind of initial impressions of Madrid.  That night (last night), I did not sleep like a baby, but rather tossed and turned for hours.  This city is either going to take me in with open arms or chew me up and spit me out, and there is no way to figure out which will be my fate until I decide to entwine myself with it.  Now is the time for new beginnings.

Saturday, September 6, 2014

Bienvenidos a…. ¡Madrid!

Whelp, I finally made it to Spain. Despite sleepless travel, dry airplane food, long waits in airports, and a clammy bus ride, I survived.  I'd be lying if I said its all been sunshine and rainbows since I arrived, but, I MADE IT.  Sure its been 95+ degrees outside, I've been jet lagged, and my hotel shares a terrace with a construction zone, but, I GOD DAMN MADE IT.  I'm trying my very hardest to be patient.  I know that the Madrid I fell in love with 11 months ago is around here somewhere, its just hiding behind sleep deprivation, dehydration, and a pile of concrete blocks.

Plaza Mayor at dusk.

In the past 72 hours, I've met about 60 new people (about 6 of whom I've remember the names of…), sat through several hours of presentations regarding becoming a Madrileña, had lunch at the Atlético de Madrid Futbol Stadium, and realized the perils of trying to get anything done during siesta. I've seen someone's life get turned upside down (in the form of a pick pocketing), seen a bus fill up like a clown car, and watched someone dance such a breathtaking flamenco that they were in visible emotional pain.

 I'm just now realizing that this city is going to give me a run for my money. I've spent years living within my comfort zone, where I'm familiar. Madrid is big. REALLY big. And immensely beautiful. I might not fall in love with it today, or tomorrow, or on that day I'm bound to lose my key or get lost, but one of these days, I'm going to realize that this city is what I've needed all along. I can already see that I will grow into myself here.

So, cheers to an adventure that will be life changing in ways that I can't yet imagine. I'm psyched to see where I am one year from now. Adios!

Wednesday, September 3, 2014

The Unloading Begins

It has been a relaxing / fun / anxious / sad / exciting / cleansing weekend.  Yesterday was my final hurrah in good ol' NH, and today, I arrived in Madrid.  It was with a heavy heart that I said a (temporary) goodbye to my home for the past 2 and a half years. Portsmouth taught me more about who I am and what kind of person I can be than I ever thought a place was capable of.  I built relationships with amazing people that I hope can withstand the test of time that so many relationships in the past have failed.  I've realized the importance of hard work, kicking back, and soaking it all in with the good company. 

I spent the past few days meeting horses named Zeus, shooting handguns and assault rifles at plastic cans (oh my god, feel the power), drinking on the decks of Portsmouth with friends and family, and packing my life into boxes.

Today, the unloading begins. Whether it be the suitcases I've lugged across airports and city streets, or the memories I've tucked into my back pocket for a day I'm feeling lonely. Today, the next chapter of my life begins, and though I know its going to be rocky at first and there will likely be a few bumps along the way, I won't let myself regret anything.  I won't look back 10 years from now and ask, "what if?" I'll be damned if I let life slip through my fingers without taking it for all its got.  Madrid, here I come.

¡Hasta luego!

The Charmer: Zeus

Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Packing, Packing, aaand… More Packing.

I'm quickly becoming an expert at prioritizing.  My current mindset being: if I haven't used it in the past 6 weeks, I'll likely never use it again.  This is the first time a move has involved putting the majority of my belongings into storage for a year.  Normally, I throw all of my useless belongings into trash bags, lug them across town/state lines, and then unpack them, all the while wondering, "why do I own this?" This time however, oh my god, I'm discovering how difficult it really is to group things into the categories of: 1. I need this in Spain / 2. I'll want this when I return home / and 3. This should be donated or thrown out, without losing my mind.  I leave in 7 days, and even though I'm making steady headway, I'm completely overwhelmed with forcing myself to let go of old items in order to make space for my future adventures.  Its been eye-opening to see how emotionally attached I am to useless items.  Tossing the purple fold-up sunglasses I wore to Mardi Gras my freshman year of college shouldn't ignite such a storm of old memories.  Donating the crummy t-shirts I won at a UVM hockey game shouldn't bring to me tears.  Condensing my life into boxes is helping me to prioritize my memories; to sort out the fond, painful, and funny into knick-knacks. Becoming a traveler means finding ways to make memories that can fit into my back pocket without weighing me down.  I'm slowly learning how to move forward without having to leave everything I love behind.

Monday, August 25, 2014

¡Salud!

The countdown is more-than-officially on.  I'm essentially done with work, I'm about halfway done packing (obviously an exaggeration…), and every errand I'm currently doing is somehow related to my rapidly approaching departure date.  My motivation is at an all time low, and the only things keeping me moving are watching my roommate pack up her life, seeing pictures of other auxiliaries that are already in Madrid, and the need to accomplish my pre-departure bucket list.

Whelp, #1 is officially complete.  I made it to a Red Sox game, got drunk on Bud Lights and booze I smuggled inside of my bra, and watched the Sox lose.  I sunburned my face, got an ever-so-slight farmers tan, threw peanut shells on the floor, and scrambled through the stands to find a friend on the other side of the stadium.  Dan won the horse race (I'll explain later), Jenna double-fisted, Jeff's baby blue eyes were complimented by a 300 lb man with a snake tattoo around his calf, Libby discovered the delicious combination of fenway lemonade + honey whiskey + cleavage sweat, and I contemplated every possible marry-fuck-kill combination for my friends (and sox players). Needless to say, it was one of the most American, inappropriate, and entertaining Sundays I've had in a long time.  Slept like a rock and woke up ready for round 2.

Next up: Lobster Dinner & "Music" in the park (aka the movie Frozen…best I could do).

Tuesday, August 19, 2014

Two Weeks

In T-2 weeks I make the big ol' move to Madrid. The fact that I'm still living comfortably in my fully furnished and decorated apartment is becoming an overwhelmingly apparent cause of stress.  With a million things to get done before I jet set, I'm stuck at a standstill.  I want to have enough time for debauchery with friends, quality family time, making some extra money at work, aaaand packing, but its becoming frighteningly clear that the clock is ticking.

The time has come to do what I do best: make a list (that I will likely never look at again nor complete)

Pre-Departure Bucket List

  1. Go to a Red Sox Game at Fenway and drink too many $9 Bud Lights (approximately 4? Because I'm a lightweight and have issues with pre-gaming too hard).
  2. Go out for a lobster dinner and order at least a 2 pounder because the tiny gambas in Madrid are going to be delicious but less than overwhelming in size. 
    I'll take the shrimpy one on the right PLEASE.
  3. Drive through Dunkin' Donuts at least once a day... The car and accessibility will both be distant memories soon enough. The coffee (fortunately) will soon be replaced by its much stronger/tastier European counterpart.
  4. BBQ on the patio/beach/lake/all of the aforementioned. Make sure to drink good beer during.
  5. Watch live music in Prescott Park. Make sure to drink good beer during.
  6. Drink good beer. Mahou, San Miguel & Estrella will do the trick while in Madrid, but will definitely leave something to be desired.
    One of each PLEASE.
  7. Shoot some guns. Because America.
  8. Pack boxes for storage in a way that will not make me want to use my skills from #7 when I return home.
  9. Spend a night with my parents acting like a kid (i.e. bake cookies with mom, watch movies, ask for another blanket because I simply can't reaaach, & fall asleep on the couch by 9pm).
  10. Finally get that sister tattoo that has been on the wish-list for years and years.