Wednesday, March 30, 2016

Good Craic (Social Life in Ireland)

Please don't be alarmed by the title I promise that crack and craic mean two different things in Ireland (also that's how you pronounce craic by the way). Good craic is what the Irish use to describe something that is good fun, and has become a easy descriptor to use for my time spent here so far.
Pubs are a cornerstone in Irish social life, and not just in the ways you might be thinking- people of ALL ages still go out to the bars. Unless you are in a late night club there really isn't such a thing as a "old person place" and a "younger person place", around here they gladly cater to all. Pubs are a place of community assembly, especially in Spiddal the small little town we reside in. It is where the community goes to discuss politics (which we learned in this past election week), to complain about certain tax prices, or just to simply meet up and talk about the weather. If you are looking to make quick friends with the locals or find a quiet place to escape and do your homework while in Ireland the pubs are where you need to go. Also it should be noted that going to the pubs here is like going to a community event, you are going to get drunk or make a fool of yourself you are going to socialize and enjoy each others company. It is simple and easy to make friends in Ireland, people are always welcoming whereas in the states when you are with friends out you would tend to ignore the creepy people who try to talk to you- here though that is where you find the best conversations. They aren't creepy they're friendly and overall you learn a good life lesson with every bar mate you find.


Wednesday, March 9, 2016

Language Barriers


Here in Ireland we are rather lucky in the fact that there is quite a lack of language barriers. I however will not forget the experience of walking through the airport at 6am looking for a sign that says “GO HERE” and realizing there wasn’t one. All the signs are first in Gaelic (or as they call it Irish here) and then secondly in English. It takes a bit getting used to and it is absolutely terrifying when you first walk off the plane, but like most things it gets better.

In fact just today I came across my own personal language barrier for the first time. For our Special Topics class we have to do a community outreach service learning project and so Carly, Kellie, and I all walked down to what would be comparable to a pre-school. We walked in spoke to the supervisor Ashley for a bit and then waited for the manager to come in. When she finally arrived immediately she and Ashley started speaking Irish to one another, fast and fluently I might add. It was the first time in Ireland that I didn’t really understand what exactly was happening in and exchange between two people, it was both a learning experience and EXTREMELY uncomfortable.

Gaelic just in general is a very difficult language to learn. They use sounds that not just mentally but also almost physically is hard for me and my American mouth to understand. I mean yes all our mouths are formed relatively the same way, but for 20 some odd years of my life I have never had to make the sound like I was coughing up phlegm in order to form a word and now suddenly I’m here in class with 16 other people absolutely butchering this poor language. I have also

noticed that most of it doesn’t directly translate to English so it’s a lot of round about speaking in a sense. They have much richer details, like the name of my blog for example- Aiteall means a perfect endless spring, but they also have several other words for spring whereas in America we have, well Spring. Overall the barriers aren’t enough for you not to appreciate how amazing the language is and how much people have bent over backwards to save it. It is tied so closely (especially where we are located) with the people and the culture. Most only speak it in school, but all are ever so proud of their enduring language and after a month here in Ireland I can understand why.

Wednesday, March 2, 2016

A day in the life.


It’s strange to me how quickly you pick up new patterns in life. After a month here on this beautiful green island things that once were astounding every time I saw them (like the ocean) are now simple everyday pleasures. I’m enjoying this slower pace much more than I expected too- not jumping from meeting to meeting, not dashing from job to job, charging into each deadline hoping I make it. Life is quite quiet here- in a very new and exciting way.

                A typical day consists of waking up around 8am, Marissa (a cottage mate of mine) and I are usually the first up; slowly by 9:30am though most of us are trickling out of our rooms rummaging for deodorant, makeup, coats, and breakfast. I grab my computer and a cup on my way out the door, because usually someone brings coffee, milk, and sugar to class. Classes aren’t necessarily hard here, I really enjoy them actually, but it has been three years since I had to stay seated and paying attention for more than 75 minutes; classes are around 4 hours and you get breaks but still it can be intense. After class most of us grab a blanket and a snack and find some room in front of the fire place for a nap. Sometimes we meander to Spiddal (about a 30 minute walk) - mostly for the queso at Thigh Giblin (which I absolutely recommend), or some a burger, fries, shake, and sprite at Supermacs (the Sprite is literally ALWAYS out of syrup fair warning). Sometimes though we call a taxi and head into Galway to roam around Shop Street (I suggest Taaffes, Kings Head, Quays, and Roughing Dubh- all good craic). Mostly though we nap.

                Weekends are built for travel though so take full advantage of your field trips and put some slight research into the towns/cities you’re going to so you have an idea on what to do with your days away from the group. Free weekends are good as well- on the Ryanair app for your phone you can put flying out of Shannon to Anywhere with a budget of 50 euro.

                The people though, that is what makes this simple little daily life so amazing. You sleep with them, you go out with them, you go to class with them, you travel with them, you share with them, you eat with them- literally you are with them all of the time, and that’s why they are such a principal aspect of daily life at the Park Lodge. You don’t expect it after all the Facebook stalking you do, and the somewhat awkward mandatory first meetings- but they do, they make this. Whether its homesickness and you need them to get you out of the cottage for some air and a look at the ocean, or midnight moon walks on rare cloudless nights, or surprise birthday parties, or just simply lounging around on the cottage floor in front of the fire place you grow with these people who you probably would have never met in your life had you not decided to take this leap. You find inside jokes, things you wish you never would have found out, things that absolutely annoy you, things they bring out in you that you never saw in yourself, you find this family with these people and it’s incredible. I wish I could find the words to describe the type of family you gain when you study abroad- truly this experience, my personal experience would have been completely different had it not been for them.