Thursday, December 17, 2009

Christmas by Me!!

It's hard to believe that Christmas is almost here! A week from tomorrow. I find myself thinking about what I'd be doing if I were at home right now, and sometimes that makes me feel bad. The solution: think about something else. It's really hard to do that though when everyone else is talking about going home for the holidays. For every ten foreign students I talk to, nine of them are going home for Christmas. It feels really odd to know that the traditions at home go on without me and that I'm not going to be part of that this year. It gives me a strange feeling, a feeling as if I'm out of the loop, so to say. I don't fit into the swing of things here at Christmas and I'm definitely not fitting in at home all the way over here.

Yesterday I had a surprise in my mailbox - there was an orange slip there, which serves to tell me that I got a package at the post office. I've gotten these before, so I wasn't unfamiliar with what I supposed to do. The deal was that I wasn't expecting anything. Before, I always was expecting the packages, but this time it came and I didn't know what it was. When I got the package at the post office today, I was really excited to see that Grandma Teresa and Pappy Lee sent it to me. "And what was in it?" you ask. A Christmas tree! I couldn't wait to get home and put it up. My room seems a little homier now.


Today I've been in Germany 73 days. It's the longest that I've ever been away from home at one stretch. When I look at it that way, I'm proud of myself. I'm really becoming independent and able to take care of myself. It's a real learning experience. After Christmas, on December 26, I'm over halfway to coming home. From that point onward, it's "downhill," so to say, until I'll be home at Easter. Today also marks 90 days until I'll be home - exactly three months: rest of December, January, February, and some of March. I'm looking forward to that time, but I don't want to give the impression that I'm not enjoying my time here. Things are going pretty well now that I have somewhat of a routine developed and a few friends. Some days seem really long while others fly by. I suppose that's how life is as well. Last weekend I was in Berlin (I'll blog about that later when I have more time.) and the weekend before that I went to Heidelberg for a day trip. I'll be spending Christmas with a German family in Kassel (about two hours north of here with the train), and for New Years I'm meeting Katie Hetrick in London and we're going to travel around the UK. My time "between the years" will be busy then, and I'm looking forward to it very much. It'll be especially nice to spend it with a friend from home - one who understands you and doesn't need long, drawn-out explanations about personal history, preferences, and so on. I'm really looking forward to it.

Monday, November 30, 2009

A Video Tour of Marburg

My father and I were looking for videos of Marburg on Youtube and we found this one. It does a pretty good job showing the highlights of the town. I got pretty excited when I could pick out some of the places highlighted here.



Mentioned in the clip is "Jackob Grimm." He was one of the brothers Grimm, responsible for collecting and making famous such fairy tales as "Red Riding Hood" and "Rapunzel." Marburg is proud of its Grimm Brothers history.

Apropos: The elevator is not always the fastest way to get from place to place. In the morning and after work in the afternoon, people using the elevator cause major congestion in the narrow passage. Then it's quicker - and healthier! - to climb up the steps that were shown a few moments earlier in the clip. It's really not that hard.

Saturday, November 28, 2009

Marburg B(u)y Night

It's been a while since I've written, and I know how much everyone is dying to hear from me. I'm going to fix that problem now.

Today marks the 55th day that I'm in Germany. Things are getting better - I feel like I'm living more into my life here. Developing a routine - even a rough one - has been a huge help. But I also think that I'm learning how to deal with spontaneity a bit more easily. This is, after all, supposed to be a learning experience!

Last night, the Oberstadt was open and full of people to usher in the Christmas season. The event was called "Marburg b(u)y Night." All the shops were open past their normal seven-o'clock closing times until 11:00 and the streets were decked out with lights and wreaths and music played. Kate and Julie (click on the link to learn more about Kate and Julia) and I enjoyed the festivities together. It was a terrific time and I look forward to going back to a few times before Christmas rolls around (only 27 days!!).

For Christmas I'll be with a family who lives north of here outside of the city of Kassel. I've written in a forum online with the woman-of-the-house for several years now, and when I came to Germany, she made sure to invite me. My stay at Christmas will be the third one so far of my time here. I'm glad that I'll have a family to spend Christmas with and that I can experience the "typical" German Christmas.

Not long after Christmas, Katie Hetrick will be coming to visit on December 30! We're meeting in London and going to spend New Years together there and then head to Scotland of a little excursion. Afterwards, Katie wants to come back to Germany and see where I live and what I do here. Of course, I'm excited about that. It'll be nice to have someone to spend the holidays with whom I know!

That's about all there is to share as of now. Acadamia is a major part of my life (Remeber - it is perhaps the biggest reason I'm here...). I try to make sure that my weekends are busy and that I get someone or do something when I have some freetime. I'll keep you posted about any further developments!

Kate and Julia

Two years ago Kate and Julia spent a year in Millersville. I learned to know Julia pretty well there after I had to do an interview for a project where she was my interviewee. Since I've gotten here, both of them have done a lot to try to make me feel welcome and comfortable and it's starting to work. It's nice to have someone who identifies with what you're going through.

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Long Awaited Update

They remembered that God was their rock,
the Most High God their redeemer.

People have been asking me when I'm going to post something new on my blog, and I admit that I've been rather remiss in doing so for the past several weeks. Busyness at times might have contributed to it, but also lack of motivation was and might continue to be a big contributing factor. I'll have to strive to work at it more. I apologize for not having posted more frequently.

As of today, I've been in Germany 34 days - almost five weeks. I'm trying to adjust to my new life. Something I've learned about myself: I'm very much a routine person. I've always known that, but I didn't realize how much that really was the case until I came here when trying to make my routine from home work here failed - miserably! I just never realized how much so I lived into and had become a product of my culture at home. In the past month, I've had to reshape what it means to be me while still trying to maintain every bit of me that I could possibly maintain. This balancing act has been tiring and taxing. I'm happy to report that I'm beginning to live into German life more and I feel like I'm becoming more and more used to being here every day. It's hard, but it's doable, and that's what I'm learning.

I started this post with a biblical quote from Psalms. Although it tells of how the people of God turned from God and turned back to him only in their time of need, I think it - in isolation - really speaks to how I view my current situation in Germany. Without God - my rock and redeemer - I would be lost here. Prayer has really helped me when I'm feeling lonely and depressed. It's made me realize that I'm not alone in the world. It makes connections seem open to home, friends, and family. Without it and my relationship with God, I know this year would be unbearable for me. I thank God daily for His presence in my life. He is truly my rock and my redeemer.

And now...for some more concrete, positive news. Classes are going well. Tuesdays are my busy day with three classes, and Tuesdays are my favorite day as well. I find that being busy suits my person better than not being busy. I've made friends with Janice from Canada, Kayla from Pennsylvania, and Rob from Great Britian, and I'm very thankful for them. We - minus Rob but plus Kayla's roommate - travelled to Eisenach this weekend. It was a nice day trip. We saw the Wartburg and Bach's birthplace. The Germans are very technology oriented. The Bachhaus was fitted with iPods for listening to recordings about Bach and his work or pieces of his music. It was a fantastic museum. It was also nice to visit the Wartburg again since my German has improved so much since 2004 when I was there the last time. I understood almost everything the tour guide told us during the tour, and that really made me feel good about my German.

In this picture, you see the room where Luther spent ten months at the Wartburg. During that time, he translated the Bible into German.

Speaking German all day long can be a challenge. Before I came here, I felt confident in my German skills, but after being here for a month, I realize that it's more than just listening to a professor speaking. It's everyday life and all that goes along with it as well. I do notice that my German has improved some even in the short time that I've been here, so I'm hoping that it will continue to improve in the coming months.

The next few weeks are busy for me. I'm headed to Grebenstein to visit a family that I know from the internet next weekend. The following weekend, I'm headed to Bavaria to visit my host family from 2004, and the following Saturday is going to be a day to celebrate Thanksgiving for me and the Germans who were in Millersville two years ago. It's good to be busy.

Keep after me about the blog. I will try to keep everyone updated more regularly. The longer that I don't write, the harder it is to actually do it when I try to start again.

Saturday, October 17, 2009

It's not just Homesickness

For the past several days, I've not been feeling too well. I'd not like to say that I'm sick, but I'm certainly not what I should be. I'm congested, coughing off and on, having from headaches from time to time from the congestion, and suffering from itchy/irritated eyes every now and again. It's a cold, I know, but I hate to say so. I wish that my symptoms would get on with it and go away, but these things will take their time before they "run their course." As is my luck with any race involving running, it seems that I'm also doomed to have the worst time in the race to lose the cold - so it goes.

The first week of classes is in, and I don't have much to say for it. I went to class on Monday for the "Greek for Beginners" and found out that it didn't start until Wednesday. Thankfully, I wasn't the only confused person wishing to take the course, for I wasn't the only one who showed up on Monday for the nonexistent event. There were five others. On Tuesday, I should have had two classes, but the first one won't start until next Tuesday, and the second one won't either. At least the first professor indicated as such by putting message on the door of the lecture hall, though. The second class was full when the gentleman at the podium in the front of the hall said that the class wouldn't be happening this week because the professor was in Canada. Interestingly enough, the professor provided information on Ilias (the online "learning platform" that is used at the university, probably to cut down on the volume of physical paper used in the classroom) about the course, outlining the exact topics to be covered in each lecture on which specific date, and this past Tuesday was listed as "Organisatorisches," which would translate to "organizational." Thus, my assumption was that this first class was just going to orient us to what was coming up. Obviously I was mistaken. Wednesday was the day that I actually had Greek for the first time, and I wondered if I should be sitting in the room – I was beginning to get a scratchy throat then...Luckily, I'm taking the class to get basic knowledge of Greek, and my friend Kate - who has taken the theological course that I'd like to take in the spring - told me that basically all I need to know is that a few words in the German language in the theological field come from Greek. The fact that basic Greek knowledge is "wünschenswert" is really a bit overplayed, I seemed to have gathered from here. The fact that Greek language influences theology is not something that I didn't already know and that the university thought it necessary to make this known before the outset of the course makes me ask how much confidence it has in its would-be theologians...Later in the afternoon on Wednesday, I had my Latin class. The professor went on for about twenty minutes about the Latium, a test that students in Germany must take who need to show some kind of proof of Latin knowledge before moving on in their academic or working careers. I don't need to take this test, but the professor took a huge amount of time to talk about it before he went on to rant for the next 40 minutes about the history of Julius Caesar. When the lecture was over, I talked with him, and he suggested that I not take this course because it was designed specifically to ready students to take the Latium, and since I didn't need to take that test, I could take another course that would be more generally oriented towards reading and translating Latin. That course takes place on Tuesdays and Thursday, but he said not to worry that I missed the first lecture - it was just a test day for him to get an idea where everyone is. I went, therefore, on Thursday to the class, and with my congested head, itchy eyes, and tight chest, I'm happy that I even was aware that he was talking, let alone what he was talking about. Afterwards, I lied to him and said that I understood most of what was going on, only that I didn't know the German terminology for the Latin grammatical constructions. The only thing I was thinking about during the lecture was my nose and throat - they were killing me - and how I was going to deal with them that night whilst trying to sleep.

Today was much better as far as my illness - my throat didn't hurt, but my cough and tight chest were still there and my eyes watered from time to time and my nose was constantly stuffed up. This condition really hasn't put me in the best of spirits, and it's hardly made for the most benevolent judgment call for Germany thus far in my stay, but I keep it in the back of my mind when I think about things that make me irritated, lonely, or homesick. I'm hoping this goes away in the next couple of days. Monday, my orientation group wants to go to the movies, and I'd like to go along, but I'm not going if I feel like I do today, and Friday, I'm supposed to go to Kassel for the weekend to meet a woman and her family who writes in a forum that I've written in for three years, and I'd hate to be feeling horrible for that. Those of you who really know me, know that I hate being sick. But again, let me reiterate, I not really sick - I'm just "not what I should be."

Monday, October 12, 2009

My Room

In my last post, I promised a description of my room and some pictures. The pictures didn't turn out very well, but I'll post two of them anyhow. I did warn you!

When I arrived last Monday and opened the door to my room, I was really taken aback. The room is really quite nice. The first thing I saw was a big window with colorful curtains covering them up. If there isn't one thing I hate it's having something in front of the windows keeping the natural light out, so the first thing I did was pull back the curtains. From my room, I have a pretty good view of the city, although I found out later in the week that some of the other dorms have a better view than I do. Mine is still pretty nice though, and I like it. I opened up my suitcases and put pictures of Harvey (my cat) and Carley (my dog) on at each end of the window. That way I can keep an eye on them all the time. The window stretches along the length of the wall, as well as the desk that butts right up against the wall below the window.

There is a small bookshelf hanging on the wall to the right of the desk. I put my two German dictionaries and my German Bible on it. It remains otherwise bare, but I hope to populate it with German titles soon!

The bed is along the left side of the room, and it fills neatly and compactly a space between the desk and a small petition separating the sleeping area from my entry area. On this petition, there is another bookshelf, and this one too is empty but will hopefully accumulate some volumes as my time in Germany goes along. The entry area has a sink on the right side with a small medicine cabinet made up of three mirrors that open up. I have plenty of space to store things there. I'm happy for the numerous hooks on the wall in this area, although they are there in both a rather haphazard way and with seemingly no regard for a particular color scheme. This lack of consistency is bothersome, but I'll deal with it.

On the left side of the entry is my closet. It's rather large, and that's nice. There are shelves in it and a place to hang up things. There's not a lot more I can say about it - it's a closet. The door to the closet, however, does open up and latch in the open position, thus forming two rooms: a bedroom and a washroom of sorts. It's nice to think that I don't have a one-room dwelling but a two-room one instead! I'm moving up in the world in comparison to my accommodations at Millersville!

That's all there is to say about the room. I live at the end of the hall, and if you exit my room and go directly down the hallway, you'll come to the door that leads to the common area. This is where the kitchen is. I cooked there today (salmon and broccoli), and the burners didn't heat up too quickly. I still have to figure out how to work a Celsius oven if I want to bake, but I don't know if that's going to be necessary given the numerous Bäckereien throughout the city. It's nice to do that one your own some though too.

More updates will be coming soon. I thought this time around - after having reread the last entry - I'd make sure to let you all know that despite the negative aspects that I talked about earlier, Germany really is great. I'm very happy that I came - it's something that I've looking forward to for a very long time! I'm happy and praise God that it finally happened!

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Arrival and First First Week

So...people have been wanting to know what I've been up to - and why I haven't gotten a blog post up, been active in Facebook before yesterday, or even answered emails. The reason is not that I've fled the country, hoping to cut off ties with the world that I know and love! The reason is really much more common and mundane than that - and much more annoying. It seems - and I'll explain further why this is especially irksome beyond the obvious below - where I live doesn't have an internet connection; thus, I'm limited for the time being to using internet only in the university itself, and where I live is not in the university. It was therefore really only a simple lack of access that has barred me from making contact. I hope that helps alleviate any worrying that some of you might have had, and I'm sorry to disappoint any of you who were hoping for the worst.

I arrived on Monday of this week actually - that would be Monday, October 5, 2009 in case you're keeping track for some reason. I left, as per itinerary, from BWI at 11:31 AM. My plane arrived in Chicago about ten minutes early, despite fighting a headwind the whole way. I had until, as per intinerary, 3:26 PM to sit and wait at O'Hare. This airport is huge, so I was happy that I had enough time to get where I needed to be, find my gate, and then get something to eat. As luck would have it, though, I didn't have to spend a lot of time hunting for my gate. It was about three or four down from where my plane came in from BWI. So the hour-long hunt for my next boarding gate was accomplished in about ten minutes. At first I was happy, but soon I grew peeved because, after having found my gate, I had nothing to do. My head hurt already from nervousness and lack of sleep the night before, and reading was therefore not really something that was making the time any more enjoyable. There were hundreds of people going in fifty-gazillion different directions, and all the food places were packed with people. I was hungry (The soup crackers the plane gave did little to abate my growing hunger.), and I didn't really want to herd into McDonald's with all the other twenty million people trying to do the same. I went to some stand, bought an apple and a milk, and went to a less crowded (notice I said less...that doesn't mean that it wasn't actually...) waiting area. I ate the apple and drank the milk and looked at my watch. I had spent about twenty minutes at the airport and already was bored. Coupled with my worrying about what was coming, I was really just a wreck inside. I think I projected a good front. Some woman and her daughter came up and sat down and started to talk to me, and then I wished that they would go away because I didn't really want to talk about Italy. I just wanted to get to Germany and get my worrying over with. The older woman then told me something that made me even happier - the plane was coming in from Germany, and it was experiencing a delay. That was all that I wanted to hear because I was already tired of sitting in the airport, and now the plane was late. There was nothing I was going to do about it. I tried to read during the next several hours, but that just didn't seem to make the time go any faster. Finally the plane came, we boarded, and then the real fun began.

The plane ride was seven and a half hours long, and I sat beside a man from the Middle East who was on his cell phone the entire time before the plane took off. He slouched and took up the entire armrest that was ours to share. When he had to put away his phone for takeoff, he did so, but then he started to fiddle with the TV in front of us (We each had our own little TV in the back of the seat in front of us.). He kept jabbing his finger on the screen, trying to get it to change channels, but the thing was that the safety video was playing so that we all would know what to do in case of an emergency. This man obviously didn't care about that. Finally, we got up in the air and the TVs allowed us to watch what we wanted to, and then he fell asleep. All that hassle about the TV and he didn't watch it anyhow. He was still hoarding the armrest, too. I decided to watch the German programming since I was going to Germany and flying with a German airline. It was decent. All in all, if I have to fly back to Europe again, I'm going with Lufthansa. The people were nice, the service was great, and the seats weren't bad for plane seats (I can't imagine that even first class seats are that comfortable...). The food didn't taste too bad either, actually.

After I got to Germany, I couldn't figure out how to work the phone to call home. I was tired (I hadn't slept on the plane - see above re: travelling partner for explanation), and I still needed to get to Marburg, which is about an hour from the airport by train. I managed to get my luggage after what seemed like an eternity and get to the S-Bahnstation. There, I couldn't figure out how to work the Kartenautomat for my train ticket. I finally asked a lady for some help, and when she looked at it, she didn't know either. I felt relieved that my German skills were not, at least, so inadequate that I couldn't operate the train ticket machine. If the native - who uses the trains all the time - couldn't do it, how was I supposed to walk right in as if nothing were different and perform flawlessly? That didn't rid me of my stress, though. Once I got the card, got on the train, and was on the way to the Hauptbahnhof, I realized that it might not necessarily be the next stop. I didn't know exactly what the name of the stop would be, and then I started to nonchalantly look at the Fahrplan - which happened to be on the ceiling of the train, and therefore made it difficult to catch seemingly inadvertent glances at it - in order to determine what the actual name of the stop would be. The train's roaring along, I'm standing there, gawking at the ceiling and trying to hold my luggage, and I'm tired. I just want to sit down, but the train is full of people and everyone looks so mad. No one is talking, and no one is smiling. I begin to ask myself what I've gotten myself into. Finally, I figure out which stop I need when we get there and the intercom instructs us that everyone must get off at this stop anyhow. I get off, people go in a hundred different directions, and there I am, not knowing what to do with my two brown suitcases from the late 1980s and my backpack - tired, worried, and lost. I pick up the suitcases and realize that my hands are aching from the junk therewithin, and I'm glad I didn't cram them to the max. I resolve that I'll somehow figure out how to do this better when I return home. I make it upstairs, only to find more stairs upwards. Finally, I find trains up yet another flight of stairs, and cannot make heads or tails of the signs hanging everywhere. There must be 20 trains standing there and more tracks with no trains in them. I do not know what do to, and then I see two Polizisten. I ask them which train is going to Marburg, and they tell me to take the train going toward Gießen, but I better hurry because it will leave in about three minutes. I was at gate 20-something and I had to get to gate 14 and board the train (which I knew would be full) in less than three minutes.

I made it to the train and was the last one to get on right as the doors shut. The train was not full. Actually, it was kind of empty. Then I started to worry that I didn't get on the right train, but I just wanted to sit down and take a rest. I did that and asked the man sitting beside if this train was headed in the direction of Marburg. He said it was, so I just sat back and tried to relax. About halfway to Marburg though, he again told me that the train splits in two at this stop and that if I'm going to Marburg, I have to go to the front section of the train. That was wonderful, really. I had to lug my baggage out of the train and up front and reboard. After about another 35 minutes, the train got to Marburg, and there I was - almost where I needed to be. I couldn't read the map how to get where I needed to go (We never learned how to read bus maps in German classes, yet they seem to be such a part of German life. If I were a teacher, I'd make it necessary to learn how to read German Fahrpläne so that future travelers will not be in my situation...), so I just took a taxi, which turned out to be the best decision I made that day.

At the orientation meeting, I got there late because my plane was late - of course! I was only about 15 minutes late, but I felt that everyone on the room was staring at me. Of course they weren't; they were looking at the people who were the "Tutoren" and who were introducing themselves and who happened to be standing near the doorway through which I came into the room. Anyhow, no one seemed to notice my arrival, and that was just fine by me. I found my group, sat down, and about perished. Then people wanted to ask me questions, and I'm sure I looked like an idiot - I made all kinds of mistakes with my German; I was just so tired. After about three hours there, they transported us to our dorms and I put on my sweat pants and T-shirt, threw down a blanket on the bed, and collapsed. I slept for about an hour and a half before I woke up, took a shower, and came back to just lay in bed for about another hour. That night we had a tour of the dorms, so I got redressed and went out for that, but I came directly back and went to bed. I hadn't slept so well in weeks.

That afternoon I realized I had no internet, and I was crushed. I had really looked forward to making some kind of contact with home via internet as soon as possible, and now that didn't look possible. I was tired. My arms and hands ached from caring suitcases. My shoulders ached from the backpack. I felt dejected and humbled for thinking that I could for some reason come to Germany and have no problem speaking but found out otherwise. I just was really feeling bad. If someone would have asked me right then and there if I wanted to go home - all expenses paid - and tell me I had to decide instantly, I would have packed up and came home. I just felt horrible. After waking up and walking around the grounds a little bit, that feeling subsided somewhat, and I realized that I could get internet in the city for a decent price. So, I'll soon have internet, but it might take a month before the device arrives for me to plug it into the wall. That's not ideal, but workable. It's especially annoying about the internet because I live in a dormitory village of about ten buildings - all of which have internet except the one that I live in. There is some technical problem with the structure that won't allow for internet from the university, and I'd have to be fortunate enough to get this one. I always draw the shortest straw in a game of chance...

The rest of the week was filled with formalities. I still haven't made any friends, but I haven't had any regular contact with Germans other than the Tutoren - everyone else has been from a foreign country. I'm excited to say that I've had conversations with Russians, Hungarians, Romanians, Italians, French, Brazilians, Tanzanians, and Chinese (as well as Germans!), and for the most part, these people seem nice. I do notice cultural differences between them and myself, but nothing unbearable. That's part of the point of the study abroad, though - learning about other cultures.

I'm going to stop writing now. If you read this far, I congratulate you. I probably would have quit by now. Soon I'll get some pictures of my room up here (which is nice other than for the internet) and of the town. Following posts should be oftener and shorter.

Saturday, September 12, 2009

Course Selection - Tentative

Final preparations for the academic nature of my year abroad were made while I was at Millersville on Thursday. It was good to be back on campus, and part of me would have maybe just given up on the whole study abroad idea and gone back to school, but I knew that in less than a month, I’d be enjoying my time in Europe and it would only take a little bit of stamina to hold out. I know in the long run it will be worth it, but right now it seems like such a burden to bear. A good proverb worth remembering – “Good things come to those who wait.”

First I had a meeting scheduled with my economics minor advisor Dr. McPherson. I wanted to touch base with her about the course at Marburg that would most directly correspond to ECON 102 (the micro course) at Millersville. The thing is, there are not two distinct and divergent courses for macro and micro at Marburg; the introduction is taught for both in one course and all subsequent courses build off the material from that one course. In order to make sure I would get credit for something in taking that course, I had to talk with her about that. As it turned out, her son got sick that morning and she had to cancel our appointment – after I got there. She left me a note about rescheduling, but that wasn’t an option given the distance that I drove. I, therefore spoke with the department chair Dr. Smith and got the go ahead for that introductory course. I emailed Dr. McPherson to give her an update on what I discussed with Dr. Smith so that we’re on the same page. All is going to be fine with the econ course for the first semester at Marburg.

The next meeting was with my major advisor Dr. Nimmrichter. It was good to talk with her again. We discussed all the courses that I had selected and she had no problem with any of them except the one that I had selected to be my GERM 312 course. I had picked out “Humanism and Reformation,” but she thought that was too late and that 312 should be later literature. I have to find something that will fit that bill, but otherwise things are in order for what I want to take. I might also pick up a Greek course, but not get a Schein (that is, a proof and record of a grade) for that class. She says that German students do that a lot – sit in on courses but not get a grade. It might be a good way for me to get the necessary Griesischkenntnisse before I take the class on New Testament fundamentals in the spring.

As it stands now, these are the courses that I plan on enrolling in when I get to Marburg:

Winter semester:
A modern German literature course
Academic Writing
Introduction to economics
Latin III
Greek I (perhaps for no grade)

Spring semester:
New Testament fundamentals*
Old Testament fundamentals*
The Bible as a Source for Literature*
Macroeconomics OR Microeconomics OR Both

*Marburg is renown in for its theological education and is known for being the site of the convocation for the great heads of the Reformation. It is worth taking courses in undergrad on theology here and especially fitting given my hopes and plans to attend seminary after graduating from Millersville.

I will give more updates at a late date, and hopefully something that’s a bit more exciting to read about. People have been asking me what I will take while I’m there, and now that it’s somewhat finalized, I thought I’d let you know.

Friday, August 28, 2009

The Beginning

Today I will start blogging about my study abroad experience in Germany although it hasn’t officially started yet. You could say that it has, in a sense, given the fact that I’ve filled out paperwork and paid money, but I’m still in Pennsylvania, counting down the days until I’ll leave. Some background information about my “trip” might be, therefore, in order at this time so that anyone who deigns to read this exposition knows what I’m going on about.

I will leave on October 4, from Baltimore-Washington International Airport (BWI) at 11:31 AM and will arrive in Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport (ORD) at 12:35 PM (if everything is in going according to plan, that is. Airports and airlines are notoriously running late, so I don’t expect much different from experience.) From ORD, I will leave at 3:25 PM and arrive in Frankfurt at 6:55 AM. The day will be October 5.

I’m excited about both my flights; I, of course, had to snoop around and see what position I have on the plane relative to aisles and windows, and luckily I have aisle seating from both BWI to ORD and from ORD to Frankfurt. That pleases me because I know that I will have to use the “facilities” more than once if I drink anything in flight. I’d hate to have to crawl over someone sitting beside me to do so. It’s not that I would mind letting someone crawl over me, but I don’t know how much someone would like to have me clambering over them while they might be trying to sleep or some such. It’s just a good thing that I have an aisle seat.

That’s about it for now. I’ll try to keep this updated periodically. For those of you that I know are reading, I’ll send out an email to let you know when I’ve posted something more.