Wednesday, July 23, 2008
Interlude
1) How much I really, really miss my mother. She is always there for me, even when I just need a hug and a kiss on the forehead. She isn't here for me, but I still have to be a big girl, anyway.
2) I really can do all sorts of adult things without the help of anyone else... Like I can ask for directions, check into an airport, and go to an entirely different country all by me onesy. That's crazy. I've been relying on other people for that kind of stuff for my whole life... and I can do it myself. Doesn't sound very big... but there you go.
3) Getting There isn't nearly as good as Going There.
4) I'm really good company to myself, when I need to be.
5) Even when you don't understand a word someone is saying to you, their voice and their gestures and expressions tell you all you need to know about what they are saying.
6) When people are having a conversation around you in a conversation you don't know, they don't expect you to participate or understand. This leaves you free to do all sorts of stuff like check out the cute boy on the other side of the table, examine your cuticles, or hum quietly to yourself. It's great!
7) When I have been talking to people whose first language is not English, I start to dumb down my own English to something that bears no real resemblence to English. I probably break all sorts of grammatical rules just to get my point across.
8) I spend so much time on the internet reading blogs and surfing youtube, it's probably really unhealthy. Not having constant wifi helps this disease. And it helps me not read every email that comes into my inbox.
9) I don't have to call people when I am bored. This costs a lot of money.
10) Knitting is really boring when you're bored... because it occupies your hands and not your brain.
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
Solid
(Translation: Finally, I have an internet connection.)
And I am uploading pictures to photobucket right now (so you should expect to see that in your inbox as well as a Blog With Pictures.
While I'm waiting for that to download, I'm going to tell you a few things.
While I've been here, I've read four books, knitted three pairs of socks (SSS on the fourth pair, sad to say), taken over 500 pictures, spent approximately 45 hours on trains, and visited five countries. I have watched the 9 dvds that I brought with me twice (at least), and the movie I have on my ipod, 27 dresses, I have watched five times. I have called my mother 4 times, Brandlyn twice, Duncan once, and sent about a bajillion emails (approximately.) I have listened to the Robin Williams standup routine on my ipod about eight times, and the Ellen Degeneres one about 4. I have eaten more chocolate than I probably should, and have drank a LOT of Coke Zero and tea. (I feel like tea runs through my veins instead of blood. Thus is the English life.)
And thus, I have whiled away enough time to upload all of my photos. Here, I will show you Denmark!
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The first day that I was in Copenhagen, Heidi took me on a boat tour around the canals. It was an interesting way to tour Copenhagen, but a good one. It lasted about an hour.
The first day that I was in Hurup, Heidi, Tomas, and Tina took me to see many of the burial mounds that are everywhere in Northern Denmark. The landscape is just riddled with them. In this picture, there are three of them.
There was one that was really close to us, and we were able to actually go in it! This particular mound was about 5000 years old. It was incredible in there. It was picth black, and even the air smelled old.
This is Heidi's sister, Tina. The flash illuminated the cave, but without the candle we couldn't see anything.
Heidi's father turned 59 while we were in Hurup, and we had a big party with schnaps and beer and a LOT of food. I am still surprised that I can fit food in me. ;)
(This is the aftermath of dinner one day. It wasn't even the big party. ;) Lots and lots of beer. And the schnaps were on the other side of the table. Three years ago when I was in Germany, I didn't like schnaps. This time I discovered that do. Hrhm...) A pretty village church.
We went to the beach one night. These pictures were taken around 10:30pm... just to give you an idea of how light it is so late at night. What shocked me most about the shore of the North Sea on this end was how windy and violent it was. On the other side (in England/Scotland, it's quite calm, so to see people surfing the waves was a real experience. (This is Heidi!)
(We all got ice cream, and then we gave Molly some too... because she was giving us the Hungry Look.)
We went to a castle (Honestly, I'm not sure which one it was... I should have written that down...) And on the way there (and back) the bridge was up. So I took a picture.
This is the castle. What I thought was most interesting about this castle was that it wasn't built was a summerhome for some rich nobleman or king, it was really built for defense in the medieval times.
See? A moat.This is inside the castle.
And this is the view from the castle. Look how pretty it is!! Apparently this is what a real Danish summer day looks like. I only saw one of these, because it rained for most of the rest of the trip!
And this was one of the coolest things about the castle. It had a medieval fair next to it! There were about 100 actors pretending to live the medieval life here. There was even a sword fight! And people were selling their wares... and I think you could actually buy some of it.
Friday, July 18, 2008
Brother Day
Today at 8:24 (or something around that rather specific time) in the morning, in the year 1991, you shoved me away from center stage. Up until that moment in time, I was the only threat to Bentley the dog in regards to how much attention and love she got, and after that time I am sure that she must have gotten no love at all, because having two children under the age of 2 is probably hard work (Thanks, Mom and Dad!) I don't remember you as a baby. In fact, all photographic evidence points that you were a really ugly baby, and I was much prettier than you, and was loved more, because there are more pictures of me in the photo albums. (Mom would, of course, disagree. She would also point out that she loves us equally, but we all know that's a lie. She loves Topher and Lila her convertible much more than she loves either of us.) And despite the abandoment problems we both suffered in your infancy (See: Photographs of the two of us alone on the couch while the adults have a drink in the next room), we grew up to be rather normal people. But for the last seventeen years, we've been pretty solid. We love each other most of the time, are at each other's necks for the rest of the time, and steal from each other's hidden chocolate and soda stashes (Or is that just me? Oops), but it's been cool. We're tight. But this day is all about you. So here, have an imaginary box of Maltesers on me. And you know what? Have a beer, too. I'm legal over here, so I'll even buy it for you. And you know what? Have the best day of your life. It's the only day of the year we pay any attention to you, so milk it for what it's worth. I love you, Munks. You're the best brother in the world, and every other brother ain't got nuthin on you.
Love, Steffi
P.S. Ah hatechu!
Thursday, July 17, 2008
Train station numero 10
To wrap up the rest of my trip to Poland (which you will be seeing pictures of soon, I promise), yesterday Niki, her mother, and I went to Auschwitz.
It was somehow not what I expected. I guess I was expecting to feel the ghosts of the hundreds of thousands of people who died there or something... but I didn't feel there what I had felt while reading books of what happened there. I guess that I am moved more by the stories than I am the numbers. Don't get me wrong: I was moved by what I saw... But I think that I shut myself down. I don't think that I wanted to feel anything.
One of the things that did get me were the piles and piles of shoes that the Nazis had taken away from them. Thousands of shoes, just piled 8 feet high and 12 feet deep in this long hallway on both sides of you. If you have ever been to the Holocaust museum in Washington DC and seen that exhibit with the shoes, that was nothing compared to this.
Well, I still have 20 minutes until the train gets here. Will try and blog again soon. :)