Welcome to my blog! I'll try to update it relatively often, I promise. Oh and I stuck Tetris down at the bottom because it looked cool, so have fun with that.

Sunday, March 27, 2011

An incredible discovery.

One thing I love about Spain (well, Europe in general) is the crazy variety of food they have here.  Moroccan food, Turkish food, Spanish food (duh), Australian food, Lebanese food, Greek food, and so on...  Not to mention the pastries and gelato on every corner.  Yummm.

So now to my discovery.  Normally for lunch I grab a bocadillo, which includes the top and bottom slices of bread, meat, and some cheese (if you pay extra).  That's it.  Granted, the bread is the long thick fancy kind instead of the square sliced bread we use, and the meat is thicker than US sandwhich meat (usually chicken or little sausages or something), but still.  I do like bocadillos because the meat is really good, but they're still not super filling.  The other day, however, I was walking back home from the metro and noticed TWO Turkish doner kebap places!  Why haven't I gone to either of them yet?!  Needless to say, today I will be feasting on a fabulous doner for lunch instead of a little bocadillo.  Which I am off to go get now.  Score!


....


Tah-dah!  Here it is!  And for the same price as a bocadillo.  Couldn't resist posting a picture... 

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

So little time left!

I can't believe how fast this semester has gone by!  I have my final for my regular-enrollment art history class on Monday and the rest of my classes for foreigners end in about three weeks (they started later than art did).  Spain is on the trimester system so the semester ends a lot faster for me.  From there I'm taking a trip with my wonderful friends to Mallorca to hang out on the beach for the weekend!  Then I'll come back and stay in Barcelona for a few days before going out to London to meet up with a friend from my art class who lives there.  Gawdon Bennett!!  Then I return to Barcelona and recover for a day or two before my parents come.  I'll show them around the city before the three of us visit Paris and southern France.  Then I come home!  I'm really excited about all the trips I'm taking after school ends, and I can't wait to see everyone back home again, but I don't ever want to leave!  It's so sad :(

Today has so far been a pretty chill day.  I woke up around 10:30 to meet three friends to work on a homework assignment for spanish.  Luckily, this homework assignment is pretty easy.  It involves taking an hour-long walk and writing up a description of where we went.  On Friday we're exchanging our work with the other group (there are only 8 people in our class) and spending the rest of the class time taking a stroll outside.  Yessssss I like assignments like this.  So our group went to the nearby mountain/big hill called Montjuïc, and walked past the art gallery, Olympic Stadium, through some gardens, and down into a nearby neighborhood.  And the nice weather pretty much topped it all off  :)

After we finished that around 12:30, I came home and changed to go on a run.  I've been really wanting to run to the Sagrada Familia (incredible Modernist church designed by Antoni Gaudí; it´s easily the most famous "attraction" in Barcelona) but it's a bit far from my house so I hadn't gone before.  But today I finally went!  I'm completely exhausted because I hadn't run in a week, but it was the perfect weather for running and I got to see the Sagrada Familia again!  Here's a few pictures of it that I took in January:


I wanted to stop running and just sit and stare for 20 minutes, but sadly I continued on my run.  I need to take a walk over there sometime to take more time to revel in it's amazing glory.  That's going on my list of things to do.  Mom and Dad: I'm taking you here, you have no choice!

Mmk well that's all for now.  Hasta pronto!

Saturday, March 12, 2011

trip to Berlin

Hello all!

This post shall be dedicated to summarizing everything I did this past weekend in Berlin!  This trip was the biggest test of independence I've had yet, as I travelled to Germany on my own.  My friends and I were initally planning on going together, but things changed when we had to choose between Istanbul and Berlin.  They really wanted to go to Turkey but I still really wanted to see Berlin, so after some thought I decided I would just go see the city on my own and let them be free to do what they wanted to do most.  Though it's always more "fun" to go with other people, I thought that going by myself I would be a good experience because I would be able to see what I wanted to, go at my own pace, appreciate the history more, and have some good alone time.  Much longer than four days I thought I would get lonely, but just for an extended weekend I figured it'd be fine.  Plus, I found the idea of travelling to a foreign country on my own incredibly exciting :D

And guess what?  IT WAS AMAZING.  Everything went perfectly smoothly.  I got to the Barcelona airport okay, then figured out how to go from the Berlin airport to my hotel (by train, then metro, then on foot for a block or two).  I spent the rest of the afternoon (Thursday) walking around the old part of town (Mitte) for 2 or 3 hours to establish a sense of direction.  Honestly that's one of my favorite things to do.  I headed out in search of the philarmonic concert hall, where I knew I'd be going the next day (yay!), then just sort of wandered around aimlessly (okay not totally aimlessly. I knew where I was and headed in the general direction of where I wanted to go)  And I ended up running across several of the places I had already been planning on visiting though I hadn't looked for on the map yet!  So first the concert hall...


The building is kinda unusual-looking from the outside, but it's even more incredibly on the inside.  The auditorium isn't the typical set-up with ground floor and a layer or two of balconies.  It has that general idea, obviously, but the sections are divided up more, and stand individually.  As a result, it's kind of tricky finding your seat because you have to go up a couple sets of stairs (if you're near the top like I was haha), stopping to read the signs at every level just to find your section.  Idk if I explained that very well, but it was the coolest and most complex concert hall I've ever been in.  In fact, outside the actual hall and in the maze of a reception area was even cooler. Oh and I almost forgot... THE BERLIN PHILHARMONIC.  One of the most (if not the most) famous symphonic orchestras in the world.  Just the sound quality of the instruments was like nothing I've ever heard.  Everything was so crisp and clean and perfect.  Ahh I have to go back again.

So continuing with my Thursday afternoon stroll, I headed up north in the direction of the Tiergarten, which is the "Central Park" of Berlin.  But sadly, I found that pretty much everything was still in winter mode.  Another reason for me to have to go back: so I can see the Tiergarten in the spring or summer. 

From there I crossed the street over to the Holocaust Memorial for Jewish victims.


Exactly 2,711 concrete slabs of varying sizes (some a few inches tall, some a few meters,) are organized in straight files over a large slanting plane.  It was practically a laberinth.  You start out walking between the short slabs on the outskirts, but the deeper you go the taller they get, and the more the ground fluctuates.  Once you get deep inside you feel quite alone wandering aimlessly between the blocks, which was the intent of the architect.  It felt very eerie in there, and gives you a chance to just be alone, think, and reflect.

After leaving the memorial, I saw something big and cool-looking in the distance, so I went to go check it out... And what did I find?  BAM.  The Brandenburg Gate!


I don't really have any significant commentary on this one, other than it was pretty cool and is famous.  Oh I could mention though that it, and pretty much everything else in Berlin had to be reconstructed after Berlin got bombed really badly at the end of WWII in 1945.  It was sad exploring the city and learning that everything I was seeing was a reconstruction after all the damage from that year.  And as a result, the current Berlin is a new city with a very modern vibe that's easy to notice while walking down the streets.

I did a bit more exploring before finally heading back to my hotel, which was located about 2 minutes away from Checkpoint Charlie, the famous Soviet/American crossing point between East and West Berlin. 


If I had to pick one thing I got the most out of from my trip, it would have to be Checkpoint Charlie.  Obviously I knew that the Berlin Wall didn't come down until the 80's, but for some reason I never realized just how recent that was.  West Berlin was a little pocket of democracy surrounded by communism until 1989, which was only a year before I was born.  It feels so much more real when you're there, when you can see the line drawn into the pavement, walk along the reconstructed sections of the wall.  I was able to casually cross right over the former border between East and West Berlin, when just over 20 years ago I would have been shot on the spot.  I usually passed by there once or twice a day because it was so close to my hotel, and I tried to make an effort to really think about it, and how to appreciate the way things are today.  That was definitely the most eye-opening thing for me.

After my walk I went back to the hotel to relax before going to bed.  The next day I woke up and did an awesome 6 hour walking tour for just 10 euros (woo!), but I'll talk about that later.  Looks like this is going to be a long re-telling of my trip, so I'll stop this post here as installment one!  Hopefully I write the other ones...  Take care everybody!