miércoles, 12 de noviembre de 2008

Christmas list

Well, after making the list in the last entry, I thought I'd send you guys ideas for what I would pee my pants to receive for Christmas:
That's all for now, but I'll be adding to this list.....so check back frequently so you have an idea! And if you do any other kind of shopping and are unsure of my sizes, ask my mom!

Love,
Kelsey

20 days to go...

I cannot believe I'm just about ready to come home. I'm so excited to be back, but at this point in time, I really don't want to leave yet. My Spanish is coming along so nicely; I can express myself, explain how games work, give directions, and I almost have rolling my Rs down pat. And my friends here are so wonderful.

Well, there were lots of things I wanted to buy here before going home that I'm not going to have a chance to buy. I have about four dollars to last me until I don't know when, so unfortunately I won't be bringing any of you back Christmas presents. My bad.

But yeah, the things I was hoping to get were:
  • A huge Chilean flag to hang in my room
  • A soccer jersey, even if it's a rip-off version
  • Some t-shirts with Chilean things on them, such as from Teletón (a non-profit organization) or some other thing
  • A llama fur sweater (I already have a llama fur hat...but I can't seem to find it!!)
  • A Head backpack (they're incredibly cheap here, and they have an awesome selection, not just the tennis bags you see on TV)
  • A couple pleasure reading books so I could keep up on my Spanish after going back home
  • A few movies in Spanish
  • Etc.
Well...I guess I can buy these things when I come back someday in the distant future. And I do have millions of pictures to keep as memories....

Emotionally yours,
Kelsey

lunes, 10 de noviembre de 2008

Pucón - my much needed vacation

So last Thursday night I took a trip about ten to twelve hours south with my exchange program to a cute little place called Pucón. It reminded me a little bit of Lake Chelan in Eastern Washington, but you know....a lo chileno (Chilean style). And less dusty. Very green. I just got back this morning around eight and went and did my full day of classes afterward.

We arrived Friday morning after an eleven hour overnight bus ride. We got situated in some adorable cabins and embarked on a little journey into the wilderness. We visited a couple waterfalls and lagoons, smelled fresh scents emitted naturally from the trees, ran into some goats and later some ducks crossing the road, and more. We even spent two to three hours in some natural volcanic hotsprings.

i was so excited i was seriously about to pee my pants

by the way, don't forget: if you want to see the full picture, just click on it and it will enlarge

i was completely soaked after this picture

i'm in the middle...you know, the nerd with the glasses

my good buddy sarah and i in the hotsprings

she has a waterproof camera...in fact, all water-related pics here are courtesy of her

Saturday, many of us went rafting on class four rapids (class five are the most intense) and immediately after went to do an activity called "el canopy". Basically, it's the same thing as ziplining, only it is the longest and highest zipline in South America. I got a refund for the zipline on Saturday because it was pouring down rain and I was already soaked from rafting and really just felt like going back to the cabin and watching 101 Dalmations (the original) in Spanish.

my friend josh pretending to be pro and sexy...i guess he could be a wetsuit model if he decides to quit selling real estate someday (*cough* don't quit your day job, josh. *cough*)

i'm the cute one waving on the left

at one point in the river the current is too strong even for the guides, so we had to climb out, let them fish the boats over that area with anchors, then climb back in and continue down the river

watching the other boats trailing behind

Fortunately for me though, when I woke up on Sunday and saw just how gorgeous the weather was, I went back and signed up for the Sunday session. I had the time of my life and met some really interesting people from Scotland, France and North Carolina. While I was ziplining, some people (about ten) from my group climbed a giant volcano called Volcán Villarrica while others hiked in the Parque Internacional Huerquehue. After all the excitement, my friends Sarah, Josh and I grabbed some classic Chilean food at a local restaurant and we set off for our dreadfully long bus ride back to Viña del Mar....but this time, in a semi-cama bus (a double-decker bus with good reclining seats, blankets, pillows, and breakfast service).

here is one of the ziplines...the cute little chileans hook up the caribbeaners and tell you to sit in your harness and not let go of it...although when they moved on to the next station they always did all kinds of little flips and went hanging upside down

a view of volcán villarrica from the zipline

me getting ready to take off

i just can't say no to steak

bistec a lo pobre - steak on top of fried onions and fries and with a fried egg on top

Anyway, we got back this morning around eight and I am beat. Here are lots of pictures to hold you over until next time.

the view of volcán villarrica as we drove away

sarah and i being silly on the bus ride back

Ps- If you haven't heard from me in a while, it's because my Skype number and unlimited calling plans have expired, and I'm working on getting them back up. Sorry!

Oh, and here is a video of the ziplining, for your viewing pleasure.



Love,
Kelsey

jueves, 6 de noviembre de 2008

What I missed back home on Tuesday

Here is a video a friend of mine in Seattle sent me today. He was working at Walgreen's on Broadway & Pike when Obama won, and there was an explosion of happy people dancing, screaming and waving flags in the streets. According to some news pieces I've come across, on the night of the victory of Bill Clinton over G. H. W. Bush, Seattle was dead and everything appeared as orderly as it had been. This just goes to show that America has been awaiting something truly amazing to happen in its history, and everyone has come together to embrace hope and celebrate the historical catalyst of change occurring there right now. It's a shame to have missed it, but a girlfriend and I did go out on the town together for a couple hours when we found out he'd won.



Forever in love with Seattle,
Kelsey

martes, 4 de noviembre de 2008

OBAMA!!

I have never been so proud of my country....not only that we had the chance to change history and we took it, but also that so much of my generation got out there and let their voices be heard.....

America, we have a chance to take on change, to lead, to help out the world by helping ourselves, picking ourselves up from off the floor and showing the world that we care, that we don't want to blow up the universe.........and you have embraced the catalyst of that change. I love you.

me and all my friends
we're all misunderstood
they say we stand for nothing and
there's no way we ever could
now we see everything that's going wrong
with the world and those who lead it
we just feel like we don't have the means
to rise above and beat it

so we keep waiting
waiting on the world to change
we keep on waiting
waiting on the world to change

it's hard to beat the system
when we're standing at a distance
so we keep waiting
waiting on the world to change
now if we had the power
to bring our neighbors home from war
they would have never missed a Christmas
no more ribbons on their door
and when you trust your television
what you get is what you got
cause when they own the information, oh
they can bend it all they want

that's why we're waiting
waiting on the world to change
we keep on waiting
waiting on the world to change

it's not that we don't care,
we just know that the fight ain't fair
so we keep on waiting
waiting on the world to change

and we're still waiting
waiting on the world to change
we keep on waiting
waiting on the world to change
one day our generation
is gonna rule the population
so we keep on waiting
waiting on the world to change

we keep on waiting
waiting on the world to change


Ready for change,
Kelsey

domingo, 26 de octubre de 2008

Lazy

Hey everyone, I know I haven't written anything about Chile in a really long time...I'm sorry! I've been very busy! Here, I'll upload some pictures to hold you over... I'll post something to read soon!

Always,
Kelsey



jueves, 2 de octubre de 2008

My educational plan

(click to enlarge)

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This is for everyone who thought it was a bad idea for me to study Spanish. It's paying off. I've found what I love.

sábado, 27 de septiembre de 2008

Happy birthday Tasi.

Tasi fell asleep doing precalculus. The teacher wasn't mad- he encouraged me to take the picture.


This is the end result of his precalc nap- the Livestrong bracelet imprinted backwards on his face.


And this is Tasi and his sister Upu at my 18th birthday paintball party. They annihilated everyone.

I'm never going to forget how I felt the day Jordan called me and gave me the horrible news. April Fourth will forever be a day of recollection for me. All of your best friends came home from college the following weekend and we all attended your memorial service dressed in our Calcoholics shirts, and your dad gave me ten bucks to get you a new one. After the service we all went to Rock 'n Bowl in your honor, because you never let anything in life get you down. Our Calc Crew will never be broken; you'll always be there with us in spirit. We will continue celebrating your life.

We miss you.

Posted by joannl on April 7, 2008 at 3:54 p.m.
I am sorry. I was there and I tried to do what I could to help. I want the family to know that I held his hand and prayed for him. He was not alone. I have not forgotten his face since that day. I pray for him every day. I am truly sorry for the loss of your son.

Posted by kelseyluck on April 8, 2008 at 10:42 a.m.
First and foremost, I would like to say thank you to joannl for what you did there. I am so devastated to see Tasi go and I think what you did was very kind.
I transferred into North Mason HS in the middle of my sophomore year and immediately had a class with Tasi. It was there that we met and became acquaintances, and after several math classes we became good friends. I also had many classes with Upu and I loved seeing them together.
I have also met Zandra and Joss a couple times from working at Papa Murphys for almost two years and serving them pizza once in a while.
I just want to say that I am so deeply hurt for your loss. I returned to the high school Monday to be with the calculus class there, because I had calculus with all of them last year. In calculus last year we had a little crew of 8 or 10 people, including Upu and Tasi, that sat on one side of the room and we all always did things together... study groups, trips to the drive-in, we even had those CALCOHOLICS shirts made. We also did a secret santa thing as a class, and Tasi gave me the most interesting gifts: a paddle ball without the ball and string, a Calvin and Hobbes collection, and a mixture of bouncy balls. :)
I will miss Tasi so so much. My heart is so sad for the parents and especially Upu and Joss. I cannot imagine how you all are coping with this, as I am having a difficult time myself. I had an accident very similar to this one, and I agree that harsh conditions are at many times ignored in cases with teenagers, as I was also accused for major wrongdoing by the state patrol.
My thoughts are with everyone affected. I send hugs and my deepest deepest condolences. Tasi will be remembered as a great classmate and an incredible friend.

From: no-reply@kitsapsun.com
Subject: Message from joannl#267808 via Kitsap Sun
Date: April 8, 2008 11:11:22 AM PDT
To: heykelso@gmail.com

The user joannl sent the following message to you via Kitsap Sun:

==============================
Thank you for your email. I never had the pleasure of meeting either boy until that day however my step-son knew both. He told me that both boys are very nice. I, too, am a mother and could not leave this young man by himself. I just hope and pray that if something were to happen to any of my children that a stranger would do the same. God Bless you.....
==============================

From: no-reply@kitsapsun.com
Subject: Message from joannl#267808 via Kitsap Sun
Date: April 21, 2008 8:09:07 AM PDT
To: heykelso@gmail.com

The user joannl sent the following message to you via Kitsap Sun:

==============================
Thank you I appreciate the invite however I did not receive your email until this morning. The interesting thing is, I was on my way home from Silverdale and I saw the signs. So I felt a strong feeling that I should stop by and I did. The service was over however I did get a chance to talk with Tasi's parents and I feel so much better that I had a chance to tell them he was not alone. Thank you again
==============================

I cried so hard when I read what this woman had written, both in the comments section of the article and when she emailed me back. I sent her a long email thanking her for being so kindhearted and how important it was to me that you weren't alone.

Everyone misses you so much. You have always been another unique spirit to our group. I love you buddy. Thank you for touching my life.

Another article

It's going to be a little difficult to concentrate on homework today.

Broken hearted,
Kelsey

RIP Tasi Williamson
September 27, 1989 - April 4, 2008

viernes, 26 de septiembre de 2008

I love Europeans

Last year at SU I lived in the "international house" - the dorm with most of the international students. In fact, my roommate was from Austria. So I've made lots of friends from all over the place. There were five or six French kids, a girl from Denmark, my roommate from Austria, another boy from Austria, several students from Japan, and a few others from China.

Anyway, the Austrian boy, my good buddy Daniel, and I are having a chat right now about life and all the fun stuff in it. We always do. He and I used to run into each other in the dorm basement at around three in the morning during finals week and have hour-long conversations when we really meant to just say hi in passing and continue with our cramming.

Well, I told him about a recent discovery I made here while reading through my psychology book. I have discovered such a thing known as psycholinguistics. As you all know, I love psychology; I've always wanted to be a criminal profiler, which requires years of psychological study in order to know the next move of a wanted criminal before s/he actually commits it.

But as you also know, I am fascinated by language. That's why I'm in Chile in the first place. Some of my family members don't really understand why I'm "wasting" my time and money in a foreign country learning a common language (they "at the very least suggest something more in demand, such as Arabic or Russian or whatever that language is they speak in the Philippines..." you mean Tagalog?), when I should be buried in biology books and going to a public school (don't worry, I'm working on it Grandpa). So this idea of psycholinguistics fascinates the pants off of me.

Psycholinguistics is defined as "the study of relationships between linguistic behavior and psychological processes, including the process of language acquisition." In Layman's terms, it's the study of how language affects the development of the brain, including how one picks up a language and the rate of understanding of the language. How completely awesome does that sound?

Well, I googled psycholinguistics just to see where I could study such a thing. The first thing that came up was Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics in the Netherlands. This website then referred me to some great Master's programs with the Radboud University Nijgemen (also in the Netherlands). The one that interested me the most was the Research Master's in Cognitive Neuroscience specializing in Psycholinguistics. The cool thing about Radboud University Nijgemen is that they have housing for international students, and also these programs only cost between 6,000 and 16,000 Euros ($8,800-$23,400), which is considerably less than I paid for my tuition at SU last year. And if it's going to get me into an amazing, ever-evolving career that will always be in demand, it'll completely worth it.

Plus, studying something like psychology in another country makes so much more sense than at home. Sure, we don't know scientifically why Americans do things the way they do, but we do recognize American patterns and habits. I don't always recognize European habits (or Latin American ones, for that matter, which is why being here is so mentally intriguing), so I know that if this is what I want to get my Masters in, another country would be the most logical and beneficial choice for me.

Anyway, so Daniel and I were talking about how an international education is so beneficial (since he spent a year in Seattle he knows already what it has done for him as a person), and we sort of shifted into talking about how people in other countries view Americans, and finally landed on American politics. It's quite interesting; have a look:


Kelsey: Well I'm really going to make that school in the NL a goal of mine
Kelsey: it would bring me so many good opportunities both during the time of study and after
Daniel: yeah, you should, stay focused and i am sure you gonna make it
Daniel: you definitely gonna profit from going abroad and doing a masters program
Daniel: and if its really interesting you, the best you can do
Daniel: i always say have fun in what you are doing and dont force yourself to do sth you dont like bec that doesnt make sense
Kelsey: exactly
Kelsey: I only force myself to do things I don't like if I know they will pay off soon
Kelsey: For example, taking nine classes
Kelsey: It's suicide but I know in two months it'll be over and it will bring me a world of benefits
Daniel: nine?, i have 12 this quarter but our system is quite different
Daniel: how many credits do you get for nine
Kelsey: It's basically an entire year of studies
Daniel: no way
Kelsey: Yes, same number of credits
Kelsey: 45 quarter credits or 30 semester credits
Daniel: in two months, thats impossible, you are crazy
Daniel: thats a buttload of work
Kelsey: well I've already finished two months
Kelsey: hahahahaha buttload
Kelsey: yes, it is
Kelsey: I have about a million things due on Monday
Daniel: thats remarkable
Daniel: i take my hat off to you
Kelsey: haha
Kelsey: I'm doing what I can to make a desirable life for myself despite coming from a very poor family
Daniel: i know, its really impressive how you master it bec i know its very hard in the US with all the tuition fees and that stuff, without financial aid, life isnt easy especially in the US
Kelsey: Yeah
Kelsey: Yet everyone thinks the US is full of rich jerks
Kelsey: People here are shocked when I tell them what life is really like back home
Kelsey: People here have asked me if all the girls in the US are like the girls on MTV
Daniel: i know, and then really smart, intelligent people end up flipping burgers bec they cant afford anything and some retarded guys get scholarships bec they know how to throw and catch a football
Kelsey: You have discovered the secret of higher education
Kelsey: Good for you
Kelsey: It's depressing isn't it?
Daniel: haha, the secret of higher education, yes just look at G. Bush
Daniel: its very depressing and overall sad, very sad
Daniel: and if McCain gets to be the new president you should leave the country as soon as possible
Kelsey: No shit, right?
Kelsey: And if he dies, everyone should leave the country
Daniel: if he dies?
Kelsey: Because Sarah Palin is quite possibly THE dumbest bitch on the face of the planet that he could have picked for a VP
Daniel: uh, yes
Kelsey: The entire world is going to hell if she takes the throne
Daniel: hopefully not, but i am a bit scared about the southern states and their influence on the election
Kelsey: Why? Most of them want Obama
Daniel: sure, they all are very conservative
Kelsey: But many are also very pro-Black President
Daniel: what about Alabama, Florida, Missouri, Texas, maybe you are right but Texas, uhhhhhhh
Kelsey: Texas should succeed from the US
Kelsey: and become its own little nation
Kelsey: It can be the Liechtenstein of America
Kelsey: People won't really go there for enjoyment but might pass through it once in a while
Daniel: good idea, i would vote for you if you were to run in the elections
Daniel: i think many people are on the same wavelength


Look at that ingenuity. He spent ten months in the US and look at everything he picked up from it.

Well my point is that I love how I can have friends from all over the world, but I love even more that I have international friends that understand a little bit of how the US works. It doesn't bother me that many people don't know because I can't expect them to, but it's just easier to have an intellectual conversation and also take in another culture at the same time. Does that make sense? For example, I can explain my educational situation back home with someone here, and I can try my best to relate it to how the education system works here, but there isn't much overlap, so I either leave the Chilean confused, or s/he just agrees and we move on to another conversation. With a student that studied in the US (or even with my friend Carlos, the Chilean that I met in Seattle), we can have a real discussion about the topic at hand and I can also take in feedback and analysis that originates from another cultural background. It's enriching; I cherish it.

Thanks Daniel for the good talk. I always love our insanely lengthy chats. I can't wait to see you again someday. And if I do happen to go to school in the Netherlands, you know I'll be able to visit you, at great length, for cheap, and more than once. :]

My buddies Aacer (Egypt) and Daniel (Austria)

Pondering the enigma of life, the universe, and everything,
Kelsey

(The answer is 42.)

jueves, 25 de septiembre de 2008

Busy busy girl

It's going to be a long weekend.

On my To Do list:
Psychology:
  • Read two chapters
  • Post "Question of Understanding" composition in online forum, due Sunday
  • Post responses to two separate QU compositions posted by classmates, due Sunday
  • Take Week One exam over the two chapters read by 11:59pm Sunday
Asia Pacific:
  • Read several new articles
  • Skim through Powerpoints
  • Write first monography (12-15 pages), due Monday
Processes of Internationalization:
  • Read several new articles
  • Skim through Powerpoints
  • Study for first test, this Wednesday
Chilean Culture:
  • Watch Machuca
  • Read three short stories; highlight all the unknown vocabulary, translate it and record it in notebook, due Tuesday
20th Century Latin American History:
  • Skim through Powerpoints
Written Spanish:
  • Interview two people about the importance of the Chilean Independence Day and what takes place during on this holiday
  • Write a composition about findings, due Monday
Greek and Latin Etymology:
  • Memorize and practice writing Greek alphabet
  • Search for 15 Greek words in an etymological dictionary
  • Give a brief history on each word
Grammar:
  • Nothing, yay
Physics:
  • Nothing, yay
So, as you can see, I have a mountain of things to complete this weekend. The real problem is that tomorrow I'm going on an excursion with the program and will probably be gone the better part of the day. We're leaving at 7:45am, so I imagine we'll be getting back fairly late. That means I have a little bit of tonight, a little bit of tomorrow night and all of Saturday to get most of this done. Oh, and I want to start some sort of exercising regimen somewhere in there too.

So you might not hear from me for a while.

Prepared for battle,
Kelsey

miércoles, 24 de septiembre de 2008

A few observations

I haven't written for a while, and I know a lot of you are waiting to hear about my week-long backpacking trip, but I have eight classes here (and an extra one online from Olympic College back home), so I've been pretty busy. Also, I was busy having an awesome dieciocho (the 18th, Chile's Independence Day). But here is a little treat to hold you over until dinner time.

A few things I have observed about Chile:
  1. Chileans are awesome dancers. I love their dancing style.
  2. Too many people here have rattails and mullets. It needs to be fixed.
  3. Chileans with green eyes are SUPER hot.
  4. Chile is one of the largest consumers of bread in the entire world.
  5. I love reggaeton wayyyy more than rap. Rap is soooo shitty compared to reggaeton. Reggaeton actually has rhythm. You don't have to freak-dance to it to have fun.
  6. I love manjar. It's a yummy spread made from milk. It's sort of similar to caramel. But it comes with everything: churros, ice cream bars, on bread, etc.
  7. Chilean girls come off as being really catty, but the ones I've met so far have been super fun and really nice.
  8. Chilean moms will forever try to make their kids comfortable and happy. Please refer down to the picture of me in bed with once.
  9. My professors suck at answering emails.
  10. A class without a powerpoint is a rarity.
  11. In two of my classes, students who arrive late have to sit on the floor.
  12. Oh, and arriving late to class is their style. Sometimes even up to forty minutes late.
  13. I saw a young girl wearing a colegio (junior high / high school) uniform with a barbell piercing in her bottom lip. Like the two balls were on either side of the middle of her lip, with the bar inside her lip. It looked okay I guess, but she was young, and I couldn't imagine how awful it'd feel to have that done.
  14. I'm learning Greek. Useless, but awesome.
Oh yeah, by the way, I added a class to my eight-class schedule (as aforementioned). I am now taking Psych 100, General Psychology, online from Olympic College. It's worth five credits, so if you add that to my 36 transferable credits that I'm taking here, I'm four credits short of an entire school year in one semester. How awesome is that? It'll be hard as hell, but I'll pull it off. I'm excited to start working towards my psychology degree, so that I can go to grad school and work towards doing forensic psychology (criminology) like I've always wanted to.

And that's about it for now. I have to get up early to study in a few hours for a huge exam later in my class called (hold your breath, it's long) Chile Se Integra al Mundo: Procesos de Internacionización (Chile Integrated into the World: Processes of Internationalization". Snore.

Already half asleep,
Kelsey

martes, 2 de septiembre de 2008

My purpose in Chile

I was talking to someone the other day about this subject, and I wanted to highlight it for all of you.

As this person read through my earlier blog entries and asked me some questions about what I have going on back in the States, he came to the conclusion that this decision of mine to come to Chile was going to be just another event in my life, that after I go back home my growth and later on my stay here will have been irrelevante, and I will just continue on with my life as it were.

I just want to clarify some things.

First of all, of course I miss my family, of course I miss my boyfriend, of course I miss Seattle and all of my friends there, of course I miss everything that I have ever known in my entire life that I don't really have or utilize here. But that does not mean I am not enjoying myself here, that I'm not learning, growing, falling in love with the environment, and finding my way around this foreign culture and language. Nor does it mean that I am spending all of my free time here wishing I was back home. Please don't think of it like that.

Of course as many of you know I have traveled to eleven countries and counting, but that does not mean that Chile is just one more of them, because it isn't. I would never consider Chile another notch in my belt, but rather almost like a second home to me, because really, that is what it has been. I now know after having lived in six or seven different places in the last four years what it means to move away and make a new life for myself, or rather, open a new and different chapter in my life.

Of course it gets easier every time, because I have less and less of a history in each place that I've been staying, and because I haven't gone very far, so there is always an opportunity to backtrack and visit old friends. But I know it is going to be emotionally impossible for me to leave Chile knowing that I may not come back for a really long time, that I may not reunite myself with my family here and with the wonderful friends I've met. I have one friend right now that is a neighbor of mine, and we go out on weekends and have a good time but we also just chat about life and the world and one time we just hung out at his house and watched some program about China on the television. I know I'm going to be spending a hell of a lot of time with him, especially because he lives so close, and I know it's going to be hard to say goodbye to him when I leave. I've never really had a special neighbor friend like that that I spent so much time with.

But I shouldn't be thinking of that right now. I should keep my mind on my goals here. My purpose in Chile is simple.

I want to speak Spanish. I am in love with this language, and it is frequently utilized back home. And with that, I must tell my gringo friends here: I did not fly six thousand miles to practice English. I want to speak in Spanish.

I want to get to know the Hispanic culture. That's why I didn't go to Spain. I've already come into close contact with the European culture twice. It's time now to continue my quest for cultural enrichment and an overall understanding of various parts of the world. I want to meet Chileans, talk about holidays, explore the city, acquaint myself with the nightlife and try all the food. My friend Pablo told me he couldn't figure out why I would come to here or why I would want to travel to a country with less money than the US. I told him that in all honesty, there aren't a whole lot of countries with more money than the US. And the ones that do have more money are the ones that I could never afford to live in. Besides, what do I care if Chile is rich or not? For me, a country's worth isn't measured by its highly equipped armadas or its success in socialism or even how many Bill Gates and Donald Trumps come from there. A country's worth to me is the culture and sentiment it can offer me. I can already see that this country basks in culture, and I haven't even been far outside of the fifth region.

I want to broaden myself as a person, as an American. I know many people here in Chile are offended when we refer to ourselves as Americans, but please don't feel like we are excluding you from all of America, or that we think we are superior. The fact is, we don't have a word for estadounidense in English. For that reason and that reason only, we refer to ourselves as Americans (because the English equivalent to estadounidense would be something like United Statesan, and it just doesn't work. It's basically for the same reason that you refer to us as gringos, it's shorter, it sounds better). But either way, I want to be able to see the world and know that the US really isn't the best place on Earth; it's not superior, it's far younger and has less history than many other countries, and is undeniably not the most intelligent of world entities. And the only way for one to truly be able to admit to oneself all of these things and know that it is true is by experiencing the different ways of life somewhere else, and for more than a mere three weeks.

I want to study. I am not here for vacation. Of course I want all of the aforementioned things, but I want to be enriched intellectually as well. This is incredibly important to me. And for the record, when Seattle University says that it strives to enrich the person as a whole through diversity and all that, it's lying. It may want that, but it could never in a hundred years do that, especially not by doubling tuition during what could be close to an economic recession. All it's doing is eliminating the lower class, causing substantial problems for the middle class and filling its classrooms with freshmen that are either so rich they've never had to do any kind of work a day in their lives or that are dumb enough to take out forty thousand dollars in student loans. If you want real enrichment and development as a person, travel. I'm serious.

That is my purpose in Chile, to enrich myself as an individual, to learn things that can't be taught in textbooks, to understand the world as a whole, and to have a good time doing all of the above. That is why I am here; that is precisely why I chose Chile. And I am falling in love with this country.

Life is not about finding oneself, it is about creating oneself.

Love,
Kelsey

lunes, 1 de septiembre de 2008

Are you crazy?

Check this out.


That would be my schedule. In case you can't tell, I have a grand total of eight classes. That's 24 semester credits, or 36 quarter credits. There are 45 credits in a year (at a quarter school). I'm doing this because it costs me the same no matter how many classes I take, because I'm a little bit behind in my schooling due to financial constraints, and because I want to immerse myself into these interesting classes with Chileans. I want to speak a significant amount of Spanish before I leave, and I want to be able to be on track when I get home.

My schedule:
Lunes (Monday)
11:45-13:15 : Español Escrito (Intermedio) (Written Spanish, Intermediate)
45 minute break for lunch at the ISA house
14:00-15:30 : Etimología Griega y Latina (Greek & Latin Etymology) with Chileans
15:40-17:10 : Asia Pacífico (Pacific Asia) with Chileans
17:20-18:50 : Gramática para Extranjeros (Avanzada) (Grammar for Foreigners, Advanced)

Martes (Tuesday)
14:00-15:30 : Español Comunicacional y Cultura Chilena (Avanzada) (Communicational Spanish and Chilean Culture, Advanced)
17:20-18:50 : Taller de Ortofonía y Fonética del Español (Spanish Orthophonics & Phonetics Workshop)

Miércoles (Wednesday)
11:45-13:15 : Español Escrito (Intermedio) (Written Spanish, Intermediate)
45 minute break for lunch at the ISA office
14:00-15:30 : Español Comunicacional y Cultura Chilena (Avanzada) (Communicational Spanish and Chilean Cultura, Advanced)
15:40-17:10 : Chile Se Integra al Mundo: Procesos de Internacionalización (Chile Integrated into the World: Processes of Internationalization) with Chileans
17:20-18:50 : Gramática para Extranjeros (Avanzada) (Grammar for Foreigners)

Jueves (Thursday)
8:15-9:45 : Física y Humor (Physics and Humor) with Chileans
4 hour break for sleeping at my house (because what else could I do with that time?)
14:00-15:30 : Español Comunicacional y Cultura Chilena (Avanzada) (Communicational Spanish and Chilean Cultura, Advanced)
17:20-18:50 : Taller de Ortofonía y Fonética del Español (Spanish Orthophonics & Phonetics Workshop)

Viernes (Friday)
Nothing! Yay!

I'm going to explain what the specific benefits are to taking eight classes here (or basically, what problems that helps me solve) in the next entry. Because it's complicated, and I'm too tired to talk about it right now.

Just truckin' along,
Kelsey

jueves, 28 de agosto de 2008

Intercambio

Today after my Chilean Culture class, I met up with my intercambio, or language partner, for the first time. His name is Ariel. We walked around Puerto Barón, the port closest to Casa Central, for an hour or so. We had a lot to talk about because we've both traveled all over Europe and are interested in learning each others' native tongue (I guess that's the point of intercambios, right?). We also talked about our studies (he's working on finishing a degree in commercial engineering), our favorite Chilean foods, and some cool places around the area.

We decided we're going to spend one hour talking in Spanish and one hour talking in English. Ariel is currently taking English classes at an institute in Viña del Mar, and he says he only has three months to learn English, because after that he has to work. That's perfect for me, because as far as I'm concerned, I also have three months to become fluent in Spanish! I feel like my friend Daniel from Austria; when he was studying at SU last year, he was always talking about getting rid of his accent. I was never self conscious about my accent until one of my Chilean buddies, Pablo, told me one time when he was drunk that when I talk in Spanish, I sound like a robot. And there are so many gringos here that pronounce all the cognates just like they're pronounced in English, and it drives me insane! I don't want to be categorized. I want to lose my accent too; I want to be able to roll my Rs and I want to speak like I can write. And in order to do that, I need to quit hanging out so much with my gringo friends here. I need to meet more Chileans! I'm going to see how often Ariel wants to meet to practice, and hopefully I can get a lot of practice in with him.

Abrazos,
Kelsey

Having an 8:15 class isn't so bad after all

When I first signed up for classes, I planned on taking 21 credits. I knew it was a heavy load, but since it costs me the same to take as many as I can cram, I figured I'd take advantage of saving the money. My program requires me to take at least twelve credits while I'm here, so I signed up for the three Spanish courses first. Grammar for Foreigners and Written Spanish are both worth four semester credits, while Communicational Spanish and Chilean Culture is worth six credits. That already puts me at fourteen credits.

I had originally signed up for a class called Modern History of Chile, also worth four credits, but the schedule changed last minute and made it so that I wouldn't be able to (it wouldn't have transferred back as anything anyway; what could a Criminal Justice major do with two Latin American history courses?). I also originally signed up for Physics and Humor (to transfer back as my basic lab requirement at SU; it transfers back as PHYS 104), worth two credits, and a class called Mapuche Games (Mapuche is the indigenous tribe to Chile), worth two credits, because I thought it'd be a good thing to balance out all the other crazy stuff. Well since Mapuche Games is in Viña del Mar and I had my Chilean Cultura class getting out ten minutes before that, I obviously had to drop it.

Because Physics and Humor is a class with other Chilean students, it didn't start until last Thursday, even though all my other classes started on August 4. So Mondays I have two classes (four hours apart) starting at 11:45, Tuesdays I only have one class at 2:oo, Wednesdays I have three classes (with time for lunch between the first two and a two hour break between the others) starting at 11:45, and Thursdays I only had my class at 2:oo for the first two weeks of school. And Fridays I never have class! Yay!

Well all the courses with Chileans started on August 18. I decided to also take up a class called 20th Century Latin American History, because I took a class my senior year in high school called 20th Century World History, but it mainly focused on World War I, World War II and the Cold War. That class was very intriguing to me, and since it didn't tell much about anyone in the southern hemisphere I wanted to broaden my understanding of this era. This class and my Physics class are both on Thursdays, and I believe they are worth two credits each, so on top of my three Spanish classes, I will end up with eighteen credits.

Last week, my mamá told me she would be up at seven, when I needed to be up for my Physics class, and if I wanted she would make sure I got up, since I'm used to sleeping in a bit. I thought this sounded like a great idea because I knew there was no way I was going to be able to peel my lazy ass out of bed in time to leave by 7:35 or 7:40, take the metro train (because the buses are completely and unbelievably packed at this hour) to school and survive an hour and a half of a science class if I didn't get up in time to eat a piece of bread beforehand. So I didn't set my alarm of course. Well she came in to wake me up, and I asked her for ten more minutes, but she didn't come back after ten minutes. She didn't want to bother me. So I woke up at twelve. Lame.

I was really bummed out I missed my first class with Chileans. And I was pretty damn sure I was the only extranjero in the class. So I wrote the professor an email that basically said that I missed the class but I wanted to make sure I didn't miss any important information, and that I still wanted to take the class and I would definitely be there the next Thursday. Check out what he responded with (I'm sure you'll be able to tell what I said by what he said):

----- Original Message -----
Sent: Thursday, August 21, 2008 6:44 PM
Subject: FIS 021-01

Buenos días,
Hi
Hoy día yo perdí la clase de Física y Humor, y quisiera preguntarle a usted si perdí muchas informaciones

not to much

. Yo quiero tomar esta clase y estaré presente la semana que viene.

great
Gracias por todo, que esté bien.

Kelsey Luck

Angel Romero

I knew instantly that I was going to like this guy.

And I did. The class today went really well. I was right, I was the only foreigner in the class. I was sitting pretty much square in the middle too, in my bright red SU hoodie. There are actually two professors in the class, Ángel Romero and Carlos Wörner. Professor Wörner looked very mad scientist, with his nice brown suit with the inner silk vest and the crazy grey beard and unruly hair. And let's not forget the round glasses. Professor Romero looked a little more average except that he was wearing a lab coat full of white board pens. He drew a lot of hilarious pictures too while we was explaining the principles of Archimedes. He drew a bath tub with Archimedes floating on top of the water and his hand touching the bottom of the tub, and he drew a bathing suit to be polite but then he erased it. Then he drew water spilling out the edges of the tub, wrote EUREKA!! next to him, then drew wet foot prints running through a distant door, with two little buttcheeks and a leg behind the doorway. It was quite chistoso (funny). Especially because in Spanish, eureka is pronounced eo-rake-uh. And he shouted it out too. Haha.

And that was it. He told us don't bother taking notes because they really aren't necessary (I'm going to anyway, just in case I need to prove to anyone at my school what we learned is legitimate), because we were never going to have tarea (homework) or pruebas (tests). Our only obligation is consistent and punctual attendance and some sort of thing at the end of the semester, I didn't quite catch everything he said, but it's basically a presentation of some physical concept, and if we just want to draw it on the board and sit back down, we can.

So even though I have to try and adjust to going to bed earlier (which has not been working out very well by the way, especially when three days a week I get home at 7:30), and even though I have a four hour break after that class until my 2:00, then I have another two hour break before my 5:20 class, I think Physics and Humor is going to be a great class, and Thursdays aren't going to be as horrendous as I thought. I'm pretty stoked for it, especially that I can be in a class with probably forty other Chileans. I can listen more to the dialect (because my Spanish teachers tone it down), to the way they ask and answer questions, and I can have a good time and relax a bit. Alright.

Nap time,
Kelsey

martes, 26 de agosto de 2008

A new chapter in this crazy memoir of mine

I should have started writing about all this earlier. Now it's been a month already and I have to recap everything. I can't remember all the specifics! Everyone will have to bear with me.

Let's briefly continue with the night I met my family, since I didn't get to finish that part yesterday.

July 27. We finally arrived to my little hacienda in Viña del Mar. When we arrived I saw a huge gate and a door which were part of a think wall. I thought this was the house, with a door to an adjacent garage. But when my mamá chilena opened the door, we were still outside. I saw a pool, a huge palm tree, and a three story house inside this enclosure. I had never seen a fence or enclosure such as this before! It was a bit surprising. I really liked the look of things so far.

As everyone helped me with my bags, I walked inside and met my hermanita chilena (my little Chilean sister), Macarena. She gave me the traditional kiss on the cheek and gave me the grand tour of the house. In the downstairs I saw the kitchen, a huge dining room with an all-wood interior, a giant living room with couches, a stereo, a fire place, and arches everywhere. In the next room was a full size pool table. I honestly think it's larger than full size; I don't believe I've ever seen a pool table that big. The last room in the downstairs belongs to my hermano mayor (older brother), Felipe, and it had its own bathroom (well, a Jack-and-Jill bathroom with the room with the pool table) with a jacuzzi. On the second floor, I saw a bedroom painted green with a desk and a display board on Patagonia (the bedroom of the Chilean student that lives here, but she was on vacation), a large bathroom with an opaque door, another bathroom ("my" bathroom), my mamá chilena's room, my hermana mayor (older sister) Paula's room, my hermanita Maca's room, the computer room on the third floor, and finally, "my" room.
Mi pieza. For the first time in over a year, I have a room! I don't have to sleep in a closet or on the top bunk of someone else's bunk bed, I don't have to share a 14' x 15' square with someone else and use a communal bathroom in flip-flops, I don't have to sleep on a mat on the floor, I don't have to sleep on a couch in a living room. I have a room! All to myself! And it's painted green!

Don't get me wrong, I have had a wonderful experience in all of the aforementioned sleeping situations. It's just that with all the nomading around that I've been doing the last year or so, it's really nice to once again have a place that I can call my own for a while, and not have to worry if my sleeping habits, music, or obsessive-compulsive tendencies (thanks mom) are going to bother anybody else. I can hang pictures by the thousands, I can hang my clothes or keep them in drawers, I can pile my hoodies on the chair (something I am very guilty of, no matter where I go), and I can stay awake until the sun comes up and sleep until it goes back down. In addition, I only share the bathroom with one other person, who is hardly ever here. Yay, I can keep my shampoo in the shower, I can keep my toothbrush on the counter, and I can leave my hairbrush wherever I please! No shower baskets, no flip-flops, no bottom drawers, no shave cream for men, no electric razors... This is great!

Immediately after my helpers dumped my bags on my hard wood floor, we all went downstairs to tomar once. Once is like tea time. It takes place sometime between 7 and 10pm, sometimes later. It's a time when the family can all sit down and recap their days over a cup of tea and some bread. I was seated next to Maca, with mamá to my left and Felipe to my right, with Paula and her pololo (Chilean word for boyfriend) in front of me.

Once made me really nervous. I was already a bag of nerves from the time of descent in Viña del Mar and throughout the family assignment process, and here I was sitting in a brand new kitchen with six people I'd never met before, preparing myself to speak in a language not my own, a language I had more or less dabbled in but had not really lived.

But it wasn't so bad. One of the very first things they asked me was ¿Estás pololeando? and I hadn't the slighest clue what that could mean. On top of my blank stare, I think I may have raised my eyebrow like I'm known to do, because my hermanita started cracking up. They tried explaining: ¿Tienes pololo? ¿Estás pololeando? Again, I had no idea what a pololo was and the gerund pololeando just sounded absurd to me. Finally, the mom asked me ¿Tienes alguien que es como tu novio? Ahhhh. The light bulb has been illuminated. Apparently, here in Chile a novio is a like a groom in a wedding, and less like a boyfriend. If I were to say I had a novio here like I had learned back in the US, I would be speaking very formally. So they use the word pololo for boyfriend (or polola for girlfriend), and pololear means to date. Now I get it!

Unfortunately, to this day, I still have trouble understanding Paula because she speaks really fast. It's a bit easier now, but sometimes my head still spins when she asks me a question. My program director, Lizette, told us all at our orientation meetings in Santiago that we picked a hard country to study Spanish in because the people here speak such a distinct dialect that it's going to be one hell of a time for us to pick it up, especially the decent percentage of kids who came with zero Spanish-speaking background (and I mean zero. I know several people who came here without knowing how to say ¿Dónde está el baño?. And I thought I was nervous).

The reason is, a vast majority of the Chileans speak very fast, they omit the s at the end of all of their words and the d in words like nada (naa) and complicado (complicao), and they speak in a familiar "you" form different than the usual. When I want to say ¿Quieres comer? (Do you want to eat?), they would say ¿Querí comer?. When I want to say ¿Cómo te llamas? (What's your name?), they would say ¿Cómo te llamai?. When I want to say ¿Dónde vives? (Where do you live?), they would say ¿Dónde viví?. Another thing the Chileans use that no one else uses is this cute little suffix po. Sípo, yapo, claropo, nopo, levántatepo, cállatepo, déjamepo, obviopo, etc etc. It's like an emphatic note at the end of each word. You'd hear it most in arguments or commands, but in other situations too. Like the other day my hermano told my mamá, "Si necesitas algo mamá llámamepo" (If you need something, call me!). Sometimes my hermano Felipe and I banter back and forth as such, and obviopo is my favorite one. Hence the url of this blog.

So as you can see, being fairly recently introduced to a Spanish-speaking environment, not only do I have to try and pick out all the words in a rapid-fire conversation, but I also have to distinguish the new form from the form I am used to. I don't really use the new form myself, because to me it's a bit strange to just adopt it when I can't hardly explain how I slept the night before, but now I can understand it a lot better than when I first arrived.

Well, anyway, the rest of my first night went well. I felt a little weird after eating because I didn't know if I was eating too much or too little, and I didn't know when would be an appropriate time to get up and excuse myself, as I never eat at a dinner table and thus have zero table manners. When I finally made my way up to mi pieza, I started unraveling my life and tried putting the pieces back together. It was still so surreal to me to have two canvas bags sitting on a bed with an unfamiliar comforter in a lime green bedroom with three big windows and a view of the populated hills. I remembered telling my friends in Atlanta that if we missed our rescheduled flight to Santiago that I was going to get back on a plane destined for Seattle and forget this whole thing. At this point in my night, despite all the neat people in my family, despite the big house with the palm tree and pool out front, despite the sunset over the port that I had seen before all of that, I half-wished that's what I had done. I spent a good five to ten minutes just staring into my two suitcases that were overflowing with unfolded shirts and beauty products and pictures and books and school supplies. I unpacked the pictures first.
I sat on my bed and looked through every single picture I brought. There must be about 400 of them. I have three or four Walgreens picture pockets full. The first twenty or so in the first pocket are pictures that I printed from my month or two of staying at Keith's house. A picture of him smoking, a bundle of pictures of Caleb's girlfriend Autumn and I, Keith and Caleb being twin jerks, the Cat, Karl making a weird face... Those two months meant the world to me. What Keith and I had going before I left Seattle was amazing, comfortable, shared, lovely. I can't wait to live it again when I get back in three months.

I was up until two in the morning unpacking my suitcases. I believe my goal at the time was less focused on organizing the things in my room and more focused on just getting the stupid things out of my sight.

July 28 - August 1. Week of orientation. That's right, my first full day of actually living in Chile was also my first day of orientation. I remember thinking, "Am I ever going to get a break? I haven't stopped since I started..." And I spent this week running on empty from around 8:30 in the morning until about 6:45 at night. Thursday was the only exception. On Thursday, we had to spend the entire morning registering for classes, and since there was no way of knowing when everyone would be done with this clusterfuck of an event, we had the afternoon off. I got home around two that afternoon, and I took a three hour nap.

August 2-3. My first weekend in Viña del Mar. Want to know how exciting it was? I slept. All day, both days. I seriously needed it.

August 4. First day of classes. My first class was Español Escrito (Written Spanish), 11:45-1:15, and I found it to be quite boring (and still do). We just chose partners and took down each others' information in order to present one another to the class. It was like being in nineth grade all over again. This class only had twelve people in it. Later, four hours later to be exact, I had another class, Gramática para Extranjeros (Grammar for Foreigners), 5:20-6:50. The professor for this class is pretty funny. He makes the lectures a little more fun with his weird examples. I got home around seven, ate once, waited around for Keith to get off work so I could give him a call, and went to bed.

August 5. This day was easy, because on Tuesdays I only have one class, Español Comunicacional y Cultura Chilena (Communicational Spanish and Chilean Culture), 2:00-3:30. I didn't have to get up early, I didn't have to sit around for lectures all day, and I was out before four. The profesora for this class was really sweet. I love her.

August 6. This was my most complicated day (before the classes with Chilean students started after August 18). Español Escrito 11:45-1:15, just enough time to run across the street to the ISA office and eat my colación (sack lunch), then back to Cultura Chilena 2:00-3:30, with a two hour break just hanging out in the computer lab at the ISA office until my Gramática class 5:20-6:50.

August 7. Cultura Chilena 2:00-3:30. That was all.

August 8. No classes on Fridays, ever! Yay!

Well, after yet another suffocatingly long blog entry, I must say goodnight. My mamá noticed I was busy typing away and brought me once...


If you want to leave a comment, please click the link at the end of this entry that says 0 comentarios (or whatever the number may be). Thanks for reading!

Hasta pronto!
Kelsey