Freiburg--last take
16. Juli
Two more hours until the 4-hour testing marathon begins. How did I become such a paranoid test-taker? I´m WAY out of practice. I'm also WAY under-prepared. Oh yeah, and I'm also WAY scared of the German expectations.
***Epilogue***
Finished. Not brilliant, but finished.
12. Juli
People, I have a request, and I need your help desperately: can we PLEASE try to start using the word "twee"? (although, according to dictionary.com, it's "chiefly British") If no other better usage contexts come to mind, you can at least use it in reference to squirrels. Please, let's not miss out on this great opportunity.
10. Juli
Just when you thought you were safe...Chuck Norris makes a comeback, and this time in German! I walked into my Political Theory lecture to find a fellow student sneaking over to the overhead projector to surreptitiously put up an overhead stating: "Chuck Norris kann Luhmann steuern!" (i.e. "Chuck Norris can control Luhmann"--a ridiculously nerdy allusion to Luhmann's systems theory) The professor, who had been out in the hall, heard the laughter and headed back in to see what all the fuss was about. She didn't quite get the joke and as an opening "discussion question" requested that someone explain what was going on. One brave soul raised her hand and began to explain in an appropriately scientific tone that "Chuck Norris is a man who is generally believed to be capable of anything and everything, and thus a reference to Chuck Norris is essentially a statement about the limits of mankind's natural ability..."
Yes, the German sense of humor is indeed a bit seltsam.
8. Juli
A productive afternoon of link-surfing in WikiWonderland yielded this (pertaining to the "Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis"):
"Whorf's close analysis of the differences between English and (in one famous instance) the Hopi language raised the bar for an analysis of the relationship between language, thought, and reality by relying on close analysis of grammatical structure, rather than a more impressionistic account of the differences between, say, vocabulary items in a language. For example, "Standard Average European" (SAE) — i.e., Western languages in general — tends to analyse reality as objects in space: the present and future are thought of as "places", and time is a path linking them. A phrase like "three days" is grammatically equivalent to "three apples", or "three kilometres". Other languages, including many Native American languages, are oriented towards process. To monolingual speakers of such languages, the concrete/spatial metaphors of SAE grammar may make little sense. Whorf himself claimed that his work on the SWH was inspired by his insight that a Hopi speaker would find relativistic physics fundamentally easier to grasp than an SAE speaker would."
Does the fact that I find this insight so spectacular that I want to devote my life to it mean that I should actually devote my life to it?
Also, I'm really scared for the linguistic future of the world. Is this just me being paranoid?
6. Juli
Mmmm. Drunk and well-fed, thanks to my roommate, David, and my neighbor, Markus. It's wonderful to be able to have a few beers and then let the guys whip up a meal afterwards.
How is it possible that I'm truly going to have to leave this place? And yet, it will most likely be all too easy...that's the way of things.
4. Juli
The Germans have two words for Jell-O (in literal translation):
1) "wiggly pudding" and
2) "food of the gods".
I knew there was a reason I loved this language.
Happy 4th of July, everybody!
P.S. After switching my Windows operating system language over to French, my computer now tells me that I've just inserted a "virgin CD" every time I try to burn something through iTunes.
28. Juni
Poor little French Canadian kids can't understand the donkey in Shrek because he speaks like the big bad Parisians.
25. Juni
My mom has come and gone. It was a short but sweet weekend that invoved eating raclette in Basel, wandering through Swiss cow pastures, checking out the UN headquarters, trying out some (awkward, tourist-style) French, and stumbling upon a giant music festival in Geneva.
As the train left the station this morning, I came to realize that I'll never again be able to rely on my mom to keep me afloat and happy and engaged in life. Not that I was ever all that dependent, but from here on out, I make my own fun. Or I don't--which is what I'm scared of. I'm getting socially lazy. I wish I were naturally more people-curious and less people-overwhelmed.
19. Juni
As I was riding the Strassenbahn this morning, engrossed in my Turkish phrasebook, a dude from Nigeria sat down across the aisle from me, looked around awkwardly for a bit, and then asked me what I was reading. And then asked me where I was from. And then asked me how many languages I knew. And then asked me how long I'd been here and how long I'm staying. And then asked me what my name was. And then asked me where I lived. And then told me that he "wanted to see me again".
Me: "Hmm. Maybe we'll see each other around some day."
Him: "I ride this Strassenbahn every day and it's the first time I've seen you."
Me: *divert eyes to Turkish list of car parts*
Him: "I won't see you again if we don't figure this out now."
Me: *eyes glued to the Turkish word for 'carburator'* "I'm only here for three more weeks."
Him: "Three weeks is a long time."
etc, etc...
I was left to fill the next five painful minutes with some awkward head shaking, resigned chuckling, and a futile attempt to avoid his gaze. Finally, he hopped off the Strassenbahn one stop before I did.
I found this situation to be pretty creepy, but I'm trying to figure out why: was it genuinely offensive to me, or am I just "supposed" to think that that kind of forwardness is inacceptable? Or both? I'm thinking there may be a reason why society tells us not to try to scrounge up dates by just sidling up to random people on public transportation, but I'm trying to remember what it is...
In other news, I've been starting to use ice cream as a meal substitute. Is this sensible, or is it just fast food-style laziness? The jury is still deliberating.
13. Juni
Every morning, just for waking up, I used to receive a quarter from my parents. If I made my bed, I received an additional quarter. (I usually didn't receive the additional quarter.) This constituted my allowance from the age of six until the age of ten. Juergen Habermas thinks this is bad.
12. Juni
My poli sci class on comparative educational policies really got my ire up today. We had three students from Michigan who were entrusted with putting on a presentation of "the American school system" for a group of mixed international and German students. For much of the presentation, they were intellectually shoddy, missed the mark, and offered up inane and confusing details (just how IS that Lutheran parochial school down the street from your home in Michigan funded? how many bake sales did your school band hold every year? and how many years of gym class were you required to take in high school?). As far as college goes, they essentially just ended up giving the cookie cutter high school college counselor lecture on the college admissions process (just try explaining the term "well-rounded student" to a bunch of Germans---they did and it was hilarious). They basically just served to affirm all of the many poorly-formed prejudices that the Germans have regarding "the" American school system. No new clarity was attained. Moreover, they decided to hold the presentation in English rather than the official language of education in this country which, by the way, still happens to be GERMAN (for how long this will still be the case remains to be seen). What this means: there was minimal research done, and they banked on the fact that anything they said would automatically get "interesting" points by virtue of the fact that it's "new and exciting" information in a "new and exciting" language (and, indeed, most of the Germans, including the professor, were taken in).
All in all, they glossed over what I consider to be crucial and more enlightening issues when viewing the German and American systems from a comparative perspective: inequity in public school funding, magnet schools, foreign language and dual-language policies, racial and socio-economic achievement gaps, the fairness of college entrance exams and other standardized testing, etc. Moral of the story: I care more about educational policy than I had ever admitted to myself. Honestly, don't people CARE that EVERYTHING they are and will be is inextricably linked to their educational pasts? Education is absolutely not something to toy with or to leave un- or underexamined.
*Deep breath*.
In other news, I got my first haircut ever in a Foreign Land last week. It was cheap and turned out nicely. Assuming I understood her correctly, the haircutter lady was surprised that I let her cut so much off (I suppose the Germans aren't know to be drastic and act on impulse).
In other news, I have finally learned to recognize the ticket checkers on the Strassenbahn. So well, in fact, that I spotted them chatting "nonchalantly" with each other in a noble effort to be inconspicuous about five minutes BEFORE they even starting checking tickets and said to myself "I'll bet anything they're ticket checkers". Sure enough, they sauntered over to me "sting"-style and I had to giggle a bit, thinking "it's about time", as I showed them my ticket.
I've also had a mini-revelation: the Germans and the French refer to the United States as a plural subject, whereas English speakers, despite the fact that our language has no real way of indicating whether "the" US is to be understood as being singular or plural, tend to somehow assume we're talking about a singular subject, and we conjugate related verbs accordingly. Does this mean there's a different sense of national unity on our side of the ocean?
4. Juni
We set out early on a Tuesday morning and arrived in the vibrant capital of Liechtenstein in the early (and rainy) afternoon. Then a steep busride took us up to our starting point--the little town of Steg (still below the snow line). An hour later, and we were on a hillside riddled with curious cows and abandoned (storage?) huts. Not wanting to set up camp in a "populated" area without some sort of permission, we managed to dodge the defensive cows and find a lone elderly and nearly unintelligible Liechtensteinian man who was unloading gear at his little mountainside hotel before opening up for the season. We interpreted his accent-obscured advice as adequate permission to set up camp under a pine tree, where we proceeded to pitch our 35-euro three-person tent, prepare half-cooked spaghetti, and settle in for a night peppered with light snow flurries and cold feet (guess who forgot to bring a second pair of dry socks).
Wednesday consisted of a lot of stupid decisions, starting with the initial decision to wake up and peel ourselves out of our sleeping bags. Then, after about two hours of hiking, came the decision to cross the snow line. Then there was the decision to proceed even after meeting two trail maintenance workers who were setting up a safety fence (which, of course, we couldn't take advantage of in its unfinished state) and who looked at our shoes and packs and sort of laughed and warned us that under no circumstances should we take trail "X" and that it was best to avoid trail "Y". It should have occurred to us that this ruled out virtually all of our escape options save one--the one we ended up taking and that involved lots of snaking and clinging to brush and that killed my leg muscles for three solid days. Next came the decision to try to reach the Kuhgrat peak (about 2100m), which led us along a trail that was about 20-25cm wide and where any false move or fainting spell (high altitude, mind you) would send you plummeting down the snowy hillside.
The only good decisions: 1) deciding to turn around, head back donw, and avoid the balance beam Ridge of Death, and 2) stopping for the night in a little mountain hut open to all insane travelers like ourselves and furnished by the Liechtensteinian boy scouts.
What I gained from this experience: a better understanding of appropriate footwear, a mean sunburn (including my eyeballs), and a new respect for the Power of the Mountain.
It was also felt great to give into the temptation to be the nasty American in my train compartment on my way to Vienna by crunching through a bag of peanut M&Ms, eating peanut butter sandwiches (spread by finger), and washing it down with a traditional Austrian Almdudler.
28. Mai
Tomorrow, it's off to Liechtenstein for camping in the rain...
In other news, Turkish is VERY intriguing. The part of my brain that is devoted to grammar (i.e. ~32.7%) is having a heyday.
19. Mai
New favorite German word: "Fachidiot", meaning someone who is so obsessed with their own line of work that they are an idiot when it comes to everything outside of their own specialty
You know your book bag is too large when you're walking towards the library on a Saturday afternoon and run into a woman walking her dog who smiles at you cordially and politely asks you if you're going home for the weekend.
17. Mai
"I like blue light. I see it as a sign of civilization." ~David, my roommate (who later went on to explain that it is one of the few non-naturally occuring shades of light and that he also happens to really enjoy analog dials for some inexplicable reason)
12. Mai
German drivers are incredibly alert: I was riding home today at night in a black coat, when I crossed in front of a car that I really should not have been in front of. The car, unphased, stopped in its tracks and politely tapped its horn as a sort of *tsk tsk* and let me proceed. And this was even on a friday night with all of its drunken driving potential.
And, many thanks to [baldwint] for educating me in the psychology of anger and self loathing, but even more so for putting up with a very intense and sort chick-flicky documentary (don't ask me how such a cinematic oxymoron is possible, but it is).
Two more hours until the 4-hour testing marathon begins. How did I become such a paranoid test-taker? I´m WAY out of practice. I'm also WAY under-prepared. Oh yeah, and I'm also WAY scared of the German expectations.
***Epilogue***
Finished. Not brilliant, but finished.
12. Juli
People, I have a request, and I need your help desperately: can we PLEASE try to start using the word "twee"? (although, according to dictionary.com, it's "chiefly British") If no other better usage contexts come to mind, you can at least use it in reference to squirrels. Please, let's not miss out on this great opportunity.
10. Juli
Just when you thought you were safe...Chuck Norris makes a comeback, and this time in German! I walked into my Political Theory lecture to find a fellow student sneaking over to the overhead projector to surreptitiously put up an overhead stating: "Chuck Norris kann Luhmann steuern!" (i.e. "Chuck Norris can control Luhmann"--a ridiculously nerdy allusion to Luhmann's systems theory) The professor, who had been out in the hall, heard the laughter and headed back in to see what all the fuss was about. She didn't quite get the joke and as an opening "discussion question" requested that someone explain what was going on. One brave soul raised her hand and began to explain in an appropriately scientific tone that "Chuck Norris is a man who is generally believed to be capable of anything and everything, and thus a reference to Chuck Norris is essentially a statement about the limits of mankind's natural ability..."
Yes, the German sense of humor is indeed a bit seltsam.
8. Juli
A productive afternoon of link-surfing in WikiWonderland yielded this (pertaining to the "Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis"):
"Whorf's close analysis of the differences between English and (in one famous instance) the Hopi language raised the bar for an analysis of the relationship between language, thought, and reality by relying on close analysis of grammatical structure, rather than a more impressionistic account of the differences between, say, vocabulary items in a language. For example, "Standard Average European" (SAE) — i.e., Western languages in general — tends to analyse reality as objects in space: the present and future are thought of as "places", and time is a path linking them. A phrase like "three days" is grammatically equivalent to "three apples", or "three kilometres". Other languages, including many Native American languages, are oriented towards process. To monolingual speakers of such languages, the concrete/spatial metaphors of SAE grammar may make little sense. Whorf himself claimed that his work on the SWH was inspired by his insight that a Hopi speaker would find relativistic physics fundamentally easier to grasp than an SAE speaker would."
Does the fact that I find this insight so spectacular that I want to devote my life to it mean that I should actually devote my life to it?
Also, I'm really scared for the linguistic future of the world. Is this just me being paranoid?
6. Juli
Mmmm. Drunk and well-fed, thanks to my roommate, David, and my neighbor, Markus. It's wonderful to be able to have a few beers and then let the guys whip up a meal afterwards.
How is it possible that I'm truly going to have to leave this place? And yet, it will most likely be all too easy...that's the way of things.
4. Juli
The Germans have two words for Jell-O (in literal translation):
1) "wiggly pudding" and
2) "food of the gods".
I knew there was a reason I loved this language.
Happy 4th of July, everybody!
P.S. After switching my Windows operating system language over to French, my computer now tells me that I've just inserted a "virgin CD" every time I try to burn something through iTunes.
28. Juni
Poor little French Canadian kids can't understand the donkey in Shrek because he speaks like the big bad Parisians.
25. Juni
My mom has come and gone. It was a short but sweet weekend that invoved eating raclette in Basel, wandering through Swiss cow pastures, checking out the UN headquarters, trying out some (awkward, tourist-style) French, and stumbling upon a giant music festival in Geneva.
As the train left the station this morning, I came to realize that I'll never again be able to rely on my mom to keep me afloat and happy and engaged in life. Not that I was ever all that dependent, but from here on out, I make my own fun. Or I don't--which is what I'm scared of. I'm getting socially lazy. I wish I were naturally more people-curious and less people-overwhelmed.
19. Juni
As I was riding the Strassenbahn this morning, engrossed in my Turkish phrasebook, a dude from Nigeria sat down across the aisle from me, looked around awkwardly for a bit, and then asked me what I was reading. And then asked me where I was from. And then asked me how many languages I knew. And then asked me how long I'd been here and how long I'm staying. And then asked me what my name was. And then asked me where I lived. And then told me that he "wanted to see me again".
Me: "Hmm. Maybe we'll see each other around some day."
Him: "I ride this Strassenbahn every day and it's the first time I've seen you."
Me: *divert eyes to Turkish list of car parts*
Him: "I won't see you again if we don't figure this out now."
Me: *eyes glued to the Turkish word for 'carburator'* "I'm only here for three more weeks."
Him: "Three weeks is a long time."
etc, etc...
I was left to fill the next five painful minutes with some awkward head shaking, resigned chuckling, and a futile attempt to avoid his gaze. Finally, he hopped off the Strassenbahn one stop before I did.
I found this situation to be pretty creepy, but I'm trying to figure out why: was it genuinely offensive to me, or am I just "supposed" to think that that kind of forwardness is inacceptable? Or both? I'm thinking there may be a reason why society tells us not to try to scrounge up dates by just sidling up to random people on public transportation, but I'm trying to remember what it is...
In other news, I've been starting to use ice cream as a meal substitute. Is this sensible, or is it just fast food-style laziness? The jury is still deliberating.
13. Juni
Every morning, just for waking up, I used to receive a quarter from my parents. If I made my bed, I received an additional quarter. (I usually didn't receive the additional quarter.) This constituted my allowance from the age of six until the age of ten. Juergen Habermas thinks this is bad.
12. Juni
My poli sci class on comparative educational policies really got my ire up today. We had three students from Michigan who were entrusted with putting on a presentation of "the American school system" for a group of mixed international and German students. For much of the presentation, they were intellectually shoddy, missed the mark, and offered up inane and confusing details (just how IS that Lutheran parochial school down the street from your home in Michigan funded? how many bake sales did your school band hold every year? and how many years of gym class were you required to take in high school?). As far as college goes, they essentially just ended up giving the cookie cutter high school college counselor lecture on the college admissions process (just try explaining the term "well-rounded student" to a bunch of Germans---they did and it was hilarious). They basically just served to affirm all of the many poorly-formed prejudices that the Germans have regarding "the" American school system. No new clarity was attained. Moreover, they decided to hold the presentation in English rather than the official language of education in this country which, by the way, still happens to be GERMAN (for how long this will still be the case remains to be seen). What this means: there was minimal research done, and they banked on the fact that anything they said would automatically get "interesting" points by virtue of the fact that it's "new and exciting" information in a "new and exciting" language (and, indeed, most of the Germans, including the professor, were taken in).
All in all, they glossed over what I consider to be crucial and more enlightening issues when viewing the German and American systems from a comparative perspective: inequity in public school funding, magnet schools, foreign language and dual-language policies, racial and socio-economic achievement gaps, the fairness of college entrance exams and other standardized testing, etc. Moral of the story: I care more about educational policy than I had ever admitted to myself. Honestly, don't people CARE that EVERYTHING they are and will be is inextricably linked to their educational pasts? Education is absolutely not something to toy with or to leave un- or underexamined.
*Deep breath*.
In other news, I got my first haircut ever in a Foreign Land last week. It was cheap and turned out nicely. Assuming I understood her correctly, the haircutter lady was surprised that I let her cut so much off (I suppose the Germans aren't know to be drastic and act on impulse).
In other news, I have finally learned to recognize the ticket checkers on the Strassenbahn. So well, in fact, that I spotted them chatting "nonchalantly" with each other in a noble effort to be inconspicuous about five minutes BEFORE they even starting checking tickets and said to myself "I'll bet anything they're ticket checkers". Sure enough, they sauntered over to me "sting"-style and I had to giggle a bit, thinking "it's about time", as I showed them my ticket.
I've also had a mini-revelation: the Germans and the French refer to the United States as a plural subject, whereas English speakers, despite the fact that our language has no real way of indicating whether "the" US is to be understood as being singular or plural, tend to somehow assume we're talking about a singular subject, and we conjugate related verbs accordingly. Does this mean there's a different sense of national unity on our side of the ocean?
4. Juni
We set out early on a Tuesday morning and arrived in the vibrant capital of Liechtenstein in the early (and rainy) afternoon. Then a steep busride took us up to our starting point--the little town of Steg (still below the snow line). An hour later, and we were on a hillside riddled with curious cows and abandoned (storage?) huts. Not wanting to set up camp in a "populated" area without some sort of permission, we managed to dodge the defensive cows and find a lone elderly and nearly unintelligible Liechtensteinian man who was unloading gear at his little mountainside hotel before opening up for the season. We interpreted his accent-obscured advice as adequate permission to set up camp under a pine tree, where we proceeded to pitch our 35-euro three-person tent, prepare half-cooked spaghetti, and settle in for a night peppered with light snow flurries and cold feet (guess who forgot to bring a second pair of dry socks).
Wednesday consisted of a lot of stupid decisions, starting with the initial decision to wake up and peel ourselves out of our sleeping bags. Then, after about two hours of hiking, came the decision to cross the snow line. Then there was the decision to proceed even after meeting two trail maintenance workers who were setting up a safety fence (which, of course, we couldn't take advantage of in its unfinished state) and who looked at our shoes and packs and sort of laughed and warned us that under no circumstances should we take trail "X" and that it was best to avoid trail "Y". It should have occurred to us that this ruled out virtually all of our escape options save one--the one we ended up taking and that involved lots of snaking and clinging to brush and that killed my leg muscles for three solid days. Next came the decision to try to reach the Kuhgrat peak (about 2100m), which led us along a trail that was about 20-25cm wide and where any false move or fainting spell (high altitude, mind you) would send you plummeting down the snowy hillside.
The only good decisions: 1) deciding to turn around, head back donw, and avoid the balance beam Ridge of Death, and 2) stopping for the night in a little mountain hut open to all insane travelers like ourselves and furnished by the Liechtensteinian boy scouts.
What I gained from this experience: a better understanding of appropriate footwear, a mean sunburn (including my eyeballs), and a new respect for the Power of the Mountain.
It was also felt great to give into the temptation to be the nasty American in my train compartment on my way to Vienna by crunching through a bag of peanut M&Ms, eating peanut butter sandwiches (spread by finger), and washing it down with a traditional Austrian Almdudler.
28. Mai
Tomorrow, it's off to Liechtenstein for camping in the rain...
In other news, Turkish is VERY intriguing. The part of my brain that is devoted to grammar (i.e. ~32.7%) is having a heyday.
19. Mai
New favorite German word: "Fachidiot", meaning someone who is so obsessed with their own line of work that they are an idiot when it comes to everything outside of their own specialty
You know your book bag is too large when you're walking towards the library on a Saturday afternoon and run into a woman walking her dog who smiles at you cordially and politely asks you if you're going home for the weekend.
17. Mai
"I like blue light. I see it as a sign of civilization." ~David, my roommate (who later went on to explain that it is one of the few non-naturally occuring shades of light and that he also happens to really enjoy analog dials for some inexplicable reason)
12. Mai
German drivers are incredibly alert: I was riding home today at night in a black coat, when I crossed in front of a car that I really should not have been in front of. The car, unphased, stopped in its tracks and politely tapped its horn as a sort of *tsk tsk* and let me proceed. And this was even on a friday night with all of its drunken driving potential.
And, many thanks to [baldwint] for educating me in the psychology of anger and self loathing, but even more so for putting up with a very intense and sort chick-flicky documentary (don't ask me how such a cinematic oxymoron is possible, but it is).
recumbent