Tag Archives: tapas

Culture Shock…kind of.

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Trying to stay awake in the Madrid airport. Photo taken by Shayna Noonen, my awesome roomate.

Eating a large meal at two in the afternoon, sleeping after the meal for an hour, walking around downtown at9 p.m. and watching families with their kids running all over the Plaza Mayor and the streets.  These are cultural norms I learned about before, but when I actually saw them in action, it felt radically different.

After a short overnight flight, I woke up to a city full of lights.   So many lights, it seemed like the major parts of the city of Madrid were connected by circles of glowing lite brights.  I was in awe of the modern-looking airport with huge bright yellow supports to hold the building up.  After spending five hours there waiting for the program directors,  I got over my awe for those supports. We traveled less than 20 minutes to Alcala traveling through what seemed to me like a glorified mountainous desert.  Some places were bare, very mountainous and at some points green trees popped up for miles.

Our new host moms were excitedly waiting for us at one of the bus stops. I just knew who our mom was even though I had never met her before.  Sure enough, I was right, and we walked five bloks past supermercados, apartamentos and tons of other small shops y barros before we reached her apartamento.  As soon as I walked in I knew I was in love with the city, this apartment and everything about Alcala.   After lunch, soup with garbanzo beans, celery, carrots and couscous, bread and a strange kind of fish (tasted like tuna)  it was time for siesta!  One hour and I was up and going like a crazy person with plenty more energy to finish the day out.

I'm finally here!

As we started our tour, I began to realize that everyone we walked by was speaking Spanish.  Obvious right?  Well, even though I had been speaking Spanish to my host mom the entire afternoon, something about being the odd one out, the one who didn’t know the language well enough to fire out more than a few sentences rapidly, caught me off guard.  Definitely a chance to enhance my skills of observation..and now I know how it feels to be in a new place where I don’t really know the language as well as I thought I did.

Tapas, appetizers, are an important part of Spanish culture, because they give people the opportunity to gather around small appetizers and drinks, and spend time talking.  It seemed like we talked all night!  Well, I mostly listened and threw in a few phrases here and there, but what else can you expect for the first day?  (and ate all night…I thought we were done after the first order of seven tapas. Nope. Our host families ordered another round along with drinks. So many potatoes, hamburgers, tuna fish in tomato sauce, sausage, bread and cheese, bread and sardines, bread and tomatoes, you get the idea.  Lots of bread. )

That’s it for the first day.  Did I experience culture shock?  To a certain degree, absolutely.  Alcala is so different than what I am used to, but that’s the beauty of it.  I get to learn every day from a new challenge to understand and experience a different cultural norm.  I am so thankful for an opportunity to get rid of some of this jet lag..sleep.

Ready for takeoff…(almost!)

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I can’t believe it.  This time next month I will be landing in Madrid, right outside of Alcalá.  I have no idea where I’m staying, who my host family will be, what classes I’m taking, let alone how to carry on an intelligent conversation with the native Spanish dialect.  Am I nervous?  Nope.  All that just adds to the excitement.

What will the future hold?  How many euros will it take to buy a sandwich?  How do I successfully book a flight in Spain, and what do they think about vegetarians??   Thankfully, I’m starting to understand some of the colloquiallisms and culture with my preparation to study abroad class, but the real learning comes when I get on that plane and start the four months in Spain.

Tapas, another word for delicious. I can't wait to try them!

 

Goals for “Adventures in Alcala” This blog is not all about the good times in Spain.  As a journalist and public relations specialist, I will share the facts, some culture analysis, human connections and narratives and history.  Who knows?  I might even throw in some embarrassing stories.  We’ll see as the semester gets started.  Because I will be communicating to friends, family, Spanish classes back in Bowling Green, Ohio be on the lookout for both Spanish and English posts.  In the next few days, I will be finding out how I’m paying for room and board.  I will update scholarship results over twitter and facebook…so keep reading!

My new love interest, the very handsome Don Quixote de la Mancha, is famous in Alcala.

 Resources Here are a few resources I am using to get ready to go on the adventure of a lifetime.  The college prowler site is my favorite, because it combines history and present day tips for success.

I know it’s alot of information, but when you’re getting ready to go out of the coutry for the first time (besides Canada, but is that really going out of the country?) you’ll take all the information you can get.

Want to stay in touch? For more updates, follow me on Twitter by searching for @agailhouse or check out my LinkedIn profile.  Get ready for a flurry of updates as I get closer to January 6.  There’s no stopping me now.