Sunday, December 30, 2012

A Very Merry Viennese Christmas

Well, I'm back from Christmas in Vienna! Have been for a while but I took a few days for myself to recuperate and catch up with family and friends. The task of writing this post is also a bit daunting because I feel like I have so much to say! I'll just start from the beginning.

So I arose sickeningly early at 5:23 am on Sunday, December 23rd in order to catch the 6:20 tram to the main train station.  I showered, quickly ran through my packing checklist, checked my bags one more time, then met Allison at the tram stop and head to the station. Once our train got to the platform we rode to Karlsruhe, transferred and rode to Munich, then our third and final train took us to Vienna.

Hofburg Imperial Palace
Once we arrived we headed to our hostel, a nice place called "Hostel Ruthensteiner" that I would recommend to anyone traveling to Vienna needing a place to stay. The staff was very friendly and it had a relaxing and comfortable atmosphere. Ok, commercial over! After checking in we got a map from the front desk and scoped out a few places to eat and settled on a restaurant called Mariahilferbrau. I had the beef goulasch (absolutely delicious) while Allison had the chili (equally delicious), both of which were complemented nicely with a couple of beers. The next day we headed out into the city and saw the Christmas market, had breakfast at a bakery, and took in some of the historical buildings around town.

The days were nice, but the nights were awesome. I don't know what it is, but Vienna was full of Australians, particularly our hostel. That made for good conversation, a friendly atmosphere, and lots of laughter! We hung out at the hostel bar, went to an "Australian pub" one night (which the Australians hated), and a bar/restaurant called Mozart's that stayed open until 6 in the morning. I won't go into detail,  but good times were had, songs were sung, a guitar was played, drinks were drunk, and dumplings were eaten. Mostly.

All of Schönbrunn Palace that I
could fit on my camera screen
My favorite sight in Vienna would probably be Schönbrunn Palace. Schönbrunn, meaning "beautiful spring", was a summer palace that was requisitioned by the Allied Forces after WWII and used as offices for the British Delegation to the Allied Commission for Austria. Later it was used for important events such as the meeting between John F. Kennedy and Nikita Khrushchev (secretary of the communist party in Soviet Union, partially responsible for the de-Stalinization of Soviet Union) in 1961 [Thank you, Wikipedia]. The palace is now a museum and a small number of the palace's 1,441 is open to the public. We took the Grand Tour so we saw 40-something rooms including bed chambers, dining rooms, dressing rooms, libraries, secret meeting rooms, and the ball room. It was truly majestic but hard to believe that people actually lived there because it was so extravagant and had to have required so much upkeep! To top off the experience, there was a huge Christmas Market on the palace grounds to visit after the tour.Vienna was beautiful and a wonderful place to spend the Christmas holiday, but I'd like to go back one day, maybe in the summer time to experience the good weather and open shops!

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Sleepless in Freiburg

I'm a real student in Germany now.

...

Honestly, this has been the worst week I've had since I've been here and tomorrow (Thursday) is going to be longest day of the week, complete with having a 6-page research paper due as well as a final exam for my grammar and composition course, with another 5-page essay due the day after. And then there's the small fact that "tomorrow" is actually "today" since I'm sitting in the University Library at 4:30 a.m. waiting for the city trams to start running again. I'm here with friends so it's not that bad, plus I get to admire the illogical way in which the Germans organized their books while learning all about German, British, and American war time propaganda from 1914-1918. But I'm not complaining. Does it sound like I'm complaining? 'Cuz I'm not!
Random watercolor person whom I pity.
I know the pain she's going through... I know it well.

I suppose I brought this upon myself, what with my poor time management skills and all, but I consider this to be a learning experience. It takes more time than I thought it would to pick a research topic, gather information from various sources in various languages, translate said sources (when necessary), formulate a coherent and semi-intelligent sounding thesis in German, think of what I want to say in the body of the paper in English, then translate to German, keeping in mind that some things will not translate the way I want them to. And yes Mom, I actually read through my sources, not just the first and last chapters :)

So after having just finished my first official German research paper, I feel like I can finally call myself a student at a German University! Up until now it's just been a few worksheets here, a couple of reading assignments there, and an oral presentation or two. All of which I suppose are hard work in their own right, but it just doesn't quite compare to the stress of writing a formal paper. With footnotes! I guess it wasn't too bad for the humanities kids, but for someone who hasn't written a non-technical paper since high school, it was rather anstrengend (stressful on the mind/body). However, I've learned my lesson and I'll be ready to tackle the next essay that comes my way!

Hopefully my next post will be more about the wonders of Deutschland and less about my failures as a student! :)