Like many of life's undertakings, this blog was left unfinished. I flew back to the States before I had a chance to complete the saga, and once I was on the other side of the Atlantic, a retrospective account seemed sort of silly. So for those who'd been hoping for eight or ten more chapter-length summaries of my foreign adventures...no dice.
What you get instead is a fond look back at some of the most memorable moments I never shared with the cyberuniverse. I mean, if I can still remember them after all this time, you know they made an impression, right?
Things I'll Never Forget About Study Abroad (or at least, if I do forget, I'll have this blog post to remind me) In No Particular Order
*The Ring of Kerry, when Kelsie tried to close the door of our rental car but couldn't because the wind was too strong. Closeup of her clinging desperately to the door, afraid that letting go too suddenly would cause the wind to rip it off its hinges.
*The Ring of Kerry, Take 2, when we drove out to Portmagee to see Skellig Michael, the beautifully stark island home of the 7th century's least sociable monks, and our feverish Belgian driver (aka Ian) told me, "My cold would beat your cold in a fight and then they would go have a pint together and join to become a supervirus."
*Exploring Killarney National Park on the way back from said road trip, and getting lost on the way back from the waterfall. (I would like to thank my thighs for contributing this anecdote. They still remember how steep those trails were.)
*People-watching at the Luxembourg Gardens in Paris with Katherine Steir and Jane Bonsall
(after unexpectedly finding Jane in the recently-vacated bunk in our hostel room), sharing farrrrr too many delicious pastries in a 3-way rotation of bites, figuring out how to ask for a napkin in French, discovering Rick Steves's unofficial guide to seduction in the back of my phrase book, watching the nighttime sparklies on the Eiffel Tower, avoiding the mini Eiffel Towers being flung at us in the hopes that we'd catch them and be obliged to pay for them, writing my honors proposal at 3 a.m. in the hostel, failing completely at all attempts to capture the beautiful view of the city from the Sacre Coeur Basilica, getting sunburned within an inch of my life at Versailles, noticing that the gargoyles at the top of Notre Dame actually don't look fierce at all (just either terrified or really excited) and deciding in the Musee D'Orsay that I really like Monet even if liking him is cliched. (Even a Mac student can go with the crowd once in a while, when the crowd knows Monet paintings are gorgeous.)
*The comedy of errors and near-calamities that was our journey to the Beauvais Airport. (Including sitting on Katherine's lap for an hour-and-a-half bus ride. Sorry about that, Charli.)
*A half-kilo of strawberries for 90 cents at the Barcelona market. Enough said.
*The Mediterranean. It actually is that blue. Sort of like Ireland actually is that green.
*Going to the Sagrada Familia (aka the 20th century version of Notre Dame--it was started in the 1920s and miiiiight be completed in my lifetime) with the super-sweet, super-un-sketchy French fellows we met in our Barcelona hostel.
*"Do your mothers know you're out at this hour?"
*The comparative calmness of Madrid. Which didn't make that concert in the Plaza any less entertaining. Spanish and German military bands playing American classics while the people living in the surrounding buildings came out on their porches to watch? Can't beat that. (Unless there's a spy running along the rooftops in the background. Woody Allen, are you in need of ideas for your next city-as-a-character movie? Let's talk.)
*Madrid's art galleries. Especially the Reina Sofia. Not that I'm prejudiced against the Prado for refusing to give us the free student admission even though we were clearly entitled to it...the Reina Sofia was just nicer. And closer to the candy store.
*That insanely well-priced last meal we had in Madrid. That much food could've sustained me for the entirety of my time in Edinburgh.
*Waking up before dawn to get tickets to see the Alhambra Palace. And actually seeing the Alhambra Palace. And being completely confused the whole time due to the lack of explanatory signage. ("Ohhh, so those rooms were the baths? Now it makes sense...")
*Almost getting kicked off the bus to Sevilla, and being spared by the world's coolest bus driver, who not only let us stay despite the fact that our tickets were for the wrong day, but also played the Beatles the whole way to Sevilla
* Finding our hostel in Sevilla, at midnight, starting from the wrong bus station (on the opposite side of the city from the one I thought we'd be at), in the middle of a Holy Week procession (which had blocked off all the main streets to make way for literally hundreds of people in white robes and cone hats...but don't worry, it wasn't the KKK, it was just a religious symbol dating back to the Inquisition, totally harmless)
*Getting back to Cork after three and a half weeks of travel and feeling SO HAPPY TO BE THERE. I don't think I've ever been so excited to be anywhere in my life. It was like coming home, but better, because I wasn't in Indiana.
*Picnicking in the park, by the lough, in SUNLIGHT.
*Walking across town at 9:45 pm, just as the sun was setting, because that's the meaning of daylight savings time in Ireland during the spring.
*A ton of lovely flower displays inexplicably springing up around Cork (inexplicably, that is, until we realized how soon the Queen was coming)...and that lovely banner proclaiming Cork the "City of Welcomes" with a little crown on it belying the apparent generality of the welcoming-ness.
*Hiding in my apartment when the Queen came, because the security and crowds downtown were absurd. But hearing afterward that Corkians were very hospitable to her. As they are wont to be.
*The Butter Museum. Those of us who are science-and-math oriented came away with some fascinating statistics about how butter has been made over the centuries and how it shaped Cork. Those of us who are more artistically inclined have forgotten all those statistics, but we know they were fascinating, and we still have mental images of the old maps of Cork that were also on display. ("Look! There's where Vibes and Scribes is now! There's where the apartment building is now! There's the bridge, and the other bridge, and the other bridge...")
*Exploring the seaside town of Kinsale...in the rain, naturally...and finding both an ancestral Fitzgerald castle and an old fort. Not the fort we spent 45 minutes trying to walk to, but a fine fort nonetheless.
*My walk from my apartment to the UCC campus. I can still picture practically every step of it, and this is coming from someone who gets lost walking down the block to Kowalski's.
*My walk from my apartment to the UCC campus. I can still picture practically every step of it, and this is coming from someone who gets lost walking down the block to Kowalski's.
*The wonderful friends I made there, and all the people I crossed paths with--from Pat the Irishman, my unofficial tour guide, to the infamous and ubiquitous Orange Man, would-be seducer of foreign exchange students. I still think of them all fondly. (Now that I've put an ocean between Orange Man and me.)
Cue sappy music....This doesn't even begin to scratch the surface of all the experiences that didn't make it into this 19-part (now 20-part) mammoth of a blog. I'm sure I've already forgotten a lot of wonderful moments that I wanted, at the time, to write down before they slipped my mind. But if I stop looking at this as an attempt to document evvvvvverything, and look at it instead as an affectionate shout-out to an overall experience that was truly enriching, then this seems like it's just about long enough.
A belated thanks to everybody who dutifully read (or skimmed) this thing while it was "active"...knowing that you were keeping track of me really meant a lot. And I'll try very hard to keep track of all of you long after I've forgotten the context of this post's title. (Commercial for O2 phone plans. Or was it Meteor?)
So now, officially, and long-overdue, this is Amy the Somewhat Hapless but Always Appreciative World Traveler, signing off.