For realz.
First day of class was pretty boring, although no silly "introduce yourself...where you're from one one interesting thing..."
Not much too say about the classes themselves. One might be pretty boring, learning how to argue your point (discours et argumentation). The other one we're going to be watching clips and listening to the radio. Only two tests, each worth 50%. Woooooo! I've got one class tomorrow and after that I'm going to go watch a match du foot (Bordeaux vs Marseilles).
But what I find really, really funny is the way the people actually enrolled at the fac (the university university, not just the part for us foreign kids) get their schedules. For us, I guess it was much the same way. I showed up today not really sure where I was going or what classes I had. They hadn't 'given' schedules, so we were all pretty much clueless. When I got to the campus, I had to go look at a bulletin board with all the departments classes listed out, find my name, see what classes I had, and then find them on the schedules. No individualized schedules picked out and available online.
Leah, who wants to audit a class, had to search all through batiment B for a single bulletin board. The schedules are no where online. Just bulletin boards.
Technology is overrated though, right?
Tuesday, September 15, 2009
Monday, September 14, 2009
La cuisine française...
I still can't get over the food here. For some reason, I'm way more adventurous here when it comes to food. For example, over the course of one weekend, I tried mussels (yuck) and oysters (not toooo bad). Me! Before, you couldn't get me to look at poisson without gagging.
Me and my oyster buddy...I'm so proud of this photo!
My newly found culinary adventurousness I think stems from the fact that this entire year is for new experiences. I don't want to miss a thing because I'm too scared (and yes, I was scared of that oyster). So, if I don't try that weird looking seafood while I'm here, in a region that's known for its fruits de la mer, then I'm missing out. Maybe that's why I danced on a table with a gay man, a columbian chica, and a silly Frenchie the other night. And maybe that's why I danced old school Breton dances with some elderly folks at a Fest Noz (party of the night in Breton) this weekend. I may have felt like a fool, but it was fun :)
I'm writing this post before I have to get ready for class, so I'll see how much I can fit in. This past week I turned 21.
In the US, this is a momentous occasion. In France, not so much. It was definitely weird to have a birthday abroad. I kept thinking of how different it would be if I was at home in Madison. It wasn't a bad birthday at all, just different, and made me a little homesick, to be honest. September 8th is also my host dad's birthday, so we had two cakes at dinner time. They were DELICIOUS! My mom said they were from the best pâtisserie in Rennes, and I believe it. My family also bought me a bunch of cookies (because they know I love them), and this really good perfume called Amour by Kenzo. They popped a bottle of champagne and it was a really nice dinner. Lucile kept asking if we would be eating slugs for dinner, so I told her in the US, slugs are typical for birthdays. We eat them whole, even the heads. She thought that was pretty cool. After dinner, I went out for a little bit with some friends. Home by one. Not exactly the most rowdy of all birthdays, but it was nice.
Wednesday was the France vs Serbia World Cup qualifier, and since my family doesn't have a TV, I went out with some friends to watch the game. France's goalie got a red card within the first 10 minutes and Serbia got a penalty kick, making the game 1-0. Luckily, even down a man, France managed to score, and the game ended in a tie. SO DUMB. I'm really enjoying watching soccer here. People get so into it. Rennes has its own team, and the next home game is the 23rd. I'm most likely going. It should be really fun! I've also been playing a lot of soccer with people in the program. Its made me realized how I much I miss playing soccer on a team! The university has club sports, but I can't make it to the soccer one. So, I'm probably going to play some volleyball on Thursdays after class. Since I don't know the words for anything in volleyball in French, it should be interesting. Hopefully it'll give me the chance to meet some more French people, make some friends. I love hanging out with the people from Madison and the others in CIEE, but we don't speak French to each other. Not too good when you want to improve your speaking skills.
Thursday.........welllllllll. I feel like Thursday is a night best left not in print. Haha. It was definitely an eventful night. I tried mussels at dinner! Met some people from Palestine. And Kazakhstan (although he had a real good British accent...). We ended up getting WAY lost on the walk home, and wandered through Rennes for over an hour. I fell in a bush. You know how it goes....
I'm writing this post before I have to get ready for class, so I'll see how much I can fit in. This past week I turned 21.
Wednesday was the France vs Serbia World Cup qualifier, and since my family doesn't have a TV, I went out with some friends to watch the game. France's goalie got a red card within the first 10 minutes and Serbia got a penalty kick, making the game 1-0. Luckily, even down a man, France managed to score, and the game ended in a tie. SO DUMB. I'm really enjoying watching soccer here. People get so into it. Rennes has its own team, and the next home game is the 23rd. I'm most likely going. It should be really fun! I've also been playing a lot of soccer with people in the program. Its made me realized how I much I miss playing soccer on a team! The university has club sports, but I can't make it to the soccer one. So, I'm probably going to play some volleyball on Thursdays after class. Since I don't know the words for anything in volleyball in French, it should be interesting. Hopefully it'll give me the chance to meet some more French people, make some friends. I love hanging out with the people from Madison and the others in CIEE, but we don't speak French to each other. Not too good when you want to improve your speaking skills.
Thursday.........welllllllll. I feel like Thursday is a night best left not in print. Haha. It was definitely an eventful night. I tried mussels at dinner! Met some people from Palestine. And Kazakhstan (although he had a real good British accent...). We ended up getting WAY lost on the walk home, and wandered through Rennes for over an hour. I fell in a bush. You know how it goes....
The next day, I forgot to set my alarm, so I showed up an hour late for class. There were some people who didn't bother to show up. The rest of us were sitting there, exhausted, while purple pants professor Laurent kept asking ridiculous questions. Leah and I couldn't stop laughing the whole time, especially during the next class when we learned French hand gestures. While I was exhausted, Friday was just a really funny day. That night, I went to a little get together with my host mom. They called it an aperitif, but basically it was just snack food and wine and conversation. While I didn't add toooo much to the conversation (I told them about how cold Wisconsin gets pretty much), it was nice to be able to listen and realize I understood most of what was being said. All older French people seem to know about this book called "On the road to Madison" (sur la route a Madison), and everytime I say I'm from there, they ask me about it. No clue.
This weekend was definitely quiet in comparison to my week. Leah and I went to the marché. All sorts of flowers, vegetables, meat, cheese, breads...what was weird was that all the birds and rabbits and all those little animals still had heads and talons, much like my poulet friend from last weekend. Very gross. But the flowers were pretty!
And we got some café afterwards and relaxed. I went to the Fest Noz with some friends on Saturday night. Its a traditional Breton dance, with celtic music and dances. Most the dances involved big circles and pinky holding. There were bagpipes, oboes, saxophones, barefoot hobbit like people, orange and green decorations (I thought I was in Ireland for a second)...at first it was bizarre. But it ended up being really fun. Even though I have no rhythm and had no clue how to do any of the dances, the other people there were really willing to teach. Sadly, I have no pictures :( But it was seriously like we went back in time (minus the crazy lights on stage).
Sunday I went to the coast with my host parents and sisters. It was really different from the beach by their grandparents house. The north coast of Brittany is colder and windier. "Sauvage" was the word my mom used. But, it had its own beauty to it. There were cliffs and dunes, and the water was really blue. It was kind of what I imagine the Irish coast to look like too. Off in the distance, I could see Mont St. Michel.

There were lots of waves, which were fun to splash around in with the girls.

I'm really starting to settle in here. Rennes is a great city, and I'm having a great time! Today is my first day of actual classes at Rennes II, so I'm kind of nervous. I'll let you guys know how it goes...
Sunday I went to the coast with my host parents and sisters. It was really different from the beach by their grandparents house. The north coast of Brittany is colder and windier. "Sauvage" was the word my mom used. But, it had its own beauty to it. There were cliffs and dunes, and the water was really blue. It was kind of what I imagine the Irish coast to look like too. Off in the distance, I could see Mont St. Michel.
There were lots of waves, which were fun to splash around in with the girls.
I'm really starting to settle in here. Rennes is a great city, and I'm having a great time! Today is my first day of actual classes at Rennes II, so I'm kind of nervous. I'll let you guys know how it goes...
Sunday, September 6, 2009
I'm still alive, just busy...
Its been hard to find time to just sit down and write a post, but its Sunday and my family is off at Futuroscope, so I've got lots of free time. Last weekend we went to their grandparents house in the south of Brittany, on the beach, which was great, and then it was time to start getting used to life in a new city.
I really don't know where to even start...I've been in Rennes a little over a week now and it seems like its been months. We've been going to classes at Langues et Communication during the week. The teachers are very....eccentric. Laurent is this 40-something Frenchman who likes to wear denim jackets and purple pants. He teaches the first grammar class of my day, and as he's a very in your face, intense kind of guy (what other type of person would wear purple pants...), it's a little too much to handle at 9am every day. He's very into hypotheticals, so he makes us "imaginez" situations and pretty much everyone stares blankly. I imagine him as a guy who lived in Montreal in the 80's and never left. I've noticed a lot of France is stuck in the 80's, actually...
We also have a civilization class in the afternoons, which is pretty hit or miss. Friday, the class spent the hour talking about the year 1968, I spent the hour napping. But, when we learned about Brittany, it actually was pretty interesting. I've got a week left of classes there, and then its off to the big show: l'Université de Haute Bretagne. I placed into Avancé so I've got a pretty good selection of classes I can take, and I'm looking forward to actually taking classes that matter (not that Laurent and his purple pants aren't great...).
Rennes is a really fun town. Its doesn't feel like a big city, much in the way Madison doesn't either. The métro is efficient and clean, and the buses are too. Renne's centre ville is adorable, with all sorts of wooden buildings that have been around since the 1500's. Some look ready to fall over, but they are really cool all the same.
Life with a family has been interesting...I think that most of the families think the students are dumb, or a lot worse in French then they really are, because all I hear about is how peoples host families never think they understand. My family will repeat things three times even when I understood it the first time. Its really awkward still to be living here in a strangers house, plus the fact that I'm responding in French, so I am kind of tongue tied. I understand what my family says to me, but beyond saying "d'accord" or "oui," I don't ever know what to respond with. So, my family thinks I'm lost half the time when I'm not. Its really, really, REALLY frustrating and makes me kind of uncomfortable. I'm sure it will get better with time though. Hopefully. Hanging out with the moniteurs (French students who are there to pretty much hang out with us and help out) is awesome, and they're a lot easier to talk to. I don't feel so ridiculous.
I've been playing soccer with a few of the moniteurs and people from CIEE, which has been really fun. I definitely missed playing. Yoann, one of the moniteurs, has actually become a good friend of ours (the people from Madison), and he's shown us around and taken us out. He's really funny, and loves learning English phrases, like 'badass' and all the silly things Cody's taught him. Nightlife in Rennes is pretty crazy. There's a road here called "Rue Saint Michel" thats been nicknamed "Rue de la soif." That means road of thirst, and it definitely has earned the nickname. Its a tiny street packed with bars that gets so crowded on the weekend that you can barely walk down it. Its like if you took all the bars on State Street and condensed them down to a block. It was definitely ridiculous to see. Thursday is actually the biggest night to go out here, because most students go home Friday and Saturday to see their families.
Yesterday a few of us went to Rue de la soif to watch the France vs. Romania World Cup Qualifier game. We met some Frenchies and they asked us where we were from and upon hearing Wisconsin they all got big smiles. "That 70's Show!" Yup. Thats the only thing people know about Wisco. People here also LOVE How I Met Your Mother. Yoann loves it, the people we met last night did too. Everyone wants to be Barney. One of the guys last night was wearing a Homer Simpson shirt too. Classy. Leah, Larissa, and I had a little sleepover at Leah's house as all our families were out of town, and it was a really fun night.
I've gotta start looking at classes, it's going to be a little tough to make sure I'm taking classes to cover both majors, but I think a lot of classes offered here will work. Trying to get in the school mindset is so hard, as this trip still feels a little like vacation...
A bientôt!
Thursday, August 27, 2009
The Fam
Today we met our host families. It zas probably one of the most nervewracking things I have done in a LONG time. Its a big deal, since I'm going to be living here for a year.....
So, here's the deal: I'm living with a family of 5 (a mom, dad, 2 daughters ages 12 et 5 (and a half she prouldly told me) and a son age 10) and their cat Choupette. I'm actuqally in the city, pretty close to centre ville, which is great! a lot of students had to stay in houses in the suburbs with long commutes. The youngest girl is very very very cute (hard to understand too) but she told me I look like her friend and she likes to hold my hand. The boy likes cycling a lot and showed me all his posters of the "great cyclists."
Tommorrow I take the place,ent test to see where I end up in classes....I,m pretty nervous. I might actually study before bed. Weird. After that, the kids in my family are part of a circus camp and are putting on a "spectacle" which I am invited to. The youngest is a tightrope walker!
My room is very cute and in the basement so I can have my own space. I,ll take some pics soon. My hosts seem really accomadating, and are even going to get WiFi soon so I can use my laptop (hopefully soon...). I,m using a french keyboard which is pretty frustrating. Things are not where they should be. AND they have a kids block on facebook. Boooooooooooo.
Now tomorrow is the beginning of the real experience. I'm terrified. AH!
So, here's the deal: I'm living with a family of 5 (a mom, dad, 2 daughters ages 12 et 5 (and a half she prouldly told me) and a son age 10) and their cat Choupette. I'm actuqally in the city, pretty close to centre ville, which is great! a lot of students had to stay in houses in the suburbs with long commutes. The youngest girl is very very very cute (hard to understand too) but she told me I look like her friend and she likes to hold my hand. The boy likes cycling a lot and showed me all his posters of the "great cyclists."
Tommorrow I take the place,ent test to see where I end up in classes....I,m pretty nervous. I might actually study before bed. Weird. After that, the kids in my family are part of a circus camp and are putting on a "spectacle" which I am invited to. The youngest is a tightrope walker!
My room is very cute and in the basement so I can have my own space. I,ll take some pics soon. My hosts seem really accomadating, and are even going to get WiFi soon so I can use my laptop (hopefully soon...). I,m using a french keyboard which is pretty frustrating. Things are not where they should be. AND they have a kids block on facebook. Boooooooooooo.
Now tomorrow is the beginning of the real experience. I'm terrified. AH!
Tuesday, August 25, 2009
Bienvenue à Paris!
So, I'm in Paris right now for the orientation and its been a very very interesting couple days.
I had a Guiness at 9AM in the airport in Dublin. That was pretty wonderful after a flight with no sleep. The plane had TVs on each seat which was great, but also lead to movie watching and no napping. We (the other girls in the program from Madison) made it to Paris pretty much without a problem.
Paris is where the fun began.
Fun Tip #1: Do not take the métro with 50+ pounds of luggage. You will get stuck in the turn styles and be ridiculed by les parisiens.
Fun Tip #2: Do take the marked métro doorway for people with luggage and strollers. If you do not, see Fun Tip #1.
Lets just say, getting to our hostel was an adventure. AND the hostel had 5 lovely sets of spiraling stairs we had to lug our suitcases up. Whooooo.
Notable event from the first exhausting day...I saw a completely naked hairy Frenchman sitting on a stoop messing with his bojangles.
Since then, things have been a little more relaxed. We've met with our program and the leaders. The head director got his PhD at Madison! And the assistant director is this really nice lady from West Bend who attended UW-Milwaukee when she was younger. Wisco represent! haha. They had us sign contracts saying we would speak French pretty much all the time (which a lot of people in the program haven't really been following...I had a girl ask me if our classes were going to be in English...uh. no.) The people in the program from Madison are really nice and have been great. We're all kind of just freaking out and nervous and excited. Its good to have some people I know I can go to here.
We still don't know our host families...but we will Thursday! I'm very excited to just get to Rennes and settle down. Unpack my suitcase. Meet the people I'm going to be living with for 9 months. Mostly here in Paris I'm just tired and slightly overwhelmed. And scared. And excited. Basically a mess of emotions.
Some Paris highlights:
-Eating the BEST TIRAMISU at a random café with Leah and Larissa (two Madison girls). It was good food too and good conversation (in French, we were practicing :)
-Seeing people's reactions who've never seen the Eiffel Tower sparkle. SO fun.
-Actually finding a water fountain near Notre Dame. It was awesome. Seriously. How are Parisians not dying of dehydration?!
Anyways, I'm probably wearing out my welcome in this McDonalds (the only place with free WiFi that we've discovered). I'll get pictures up at some point and hopefully will have some more exciting news from Rennes soon!!!!!!!
I had a Guiness at 9AM in the airport in Dublin. That was pretty wonderful after a flight with no sleep. The plane had TVs on each seat which was great, but also lead to movie watching and no napping. We (the other girls in the program from Madison) made it to Paris pretty much without a problem.
Paris is where the fun began.
Fun Tip #1: Do not take the métro with 50+ pounds of luggage. You will get stuck in the turn styles and be ridiculed by les parisiens.
Fun Tip #2: Do take the marked métro doorway for people with luggage and strollers. If you do not, see Fun Tip #1.
Lets just say, getting to our hostel was an adventure. AND the hostel had 5 lovely sets of spiraling stairs we had to lug our suitcases up. Whooooo.
Notable event from the first exhausting day...I saw a completely naked hairy Frenchman sitting on a stoop messing with his bojangles.
Since then, things have been a little more relaxed. We've met with our program and the leaders. The head director got his PhD at Madison! And the assistant director is this really nice lady from West Bend who attended UW-Milwaukee when she was younger. Wisco represent! haha. They had us sign contracts saying we would speak French pretty much all the time (which a lot of people in the program haven't really been following...I had a girl ask me if our classes were going to be in English...uh. no.) The people in the program from Madison are really nice and have been great. We're all kind of just freaking out and nervous and excited. Its good to have some people I know I can go to here.
We still don't know our host families...but we will Thursday! I'm very excited to just get to Rennes and settle down. Unpack my suitcase. Meet the people I'm going to be living with for 9 months. Mostly here in Paris I'm just tired and slightly overwhelmed. And scared. And excited. Basically a mess of emotions.
Some Paris highlights:
-Eating the BEST TIRAMISU at a random café with Leah and Larissa (two Madison girls). It was good food too and good conversation (in French, we were practicing :)
-Seeing people's reactions who've never seen the Eiffel Tower sparkle. SO fun.
-Actually finding a water fountain near Notre Dame. It was awesome. Seriously. How are Parisians not dying of dehydration?!
Anyways, I'm probably wearing out my welcome in this McDonalds (the only place with free WiFi that we've discovered). I'll get pictures up at some point and hopefully will have some more exciting news from Rennes soon!!!!!!!
Thursday, August 13, 2009
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