I have been given the chance of a life time, a Rotary Youth Exchange. I went through the daunting application process, attended the meetings, and readied myself to leave the country for a whole year! Now I want to share all my experiences with whoever wants to read about them, so enjoy!

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

One Month and One Week down!

     So I have kind of been a slacker about keeping up on my blog, as I've realized I am far busier than I thought I would be! However, I wont give up on it quite yet. I have now completed one month of my exchange and I am glad to report that it has been very successful!

     School... When I last left off i said i would be starting school the next day, and that i did! It went much better than i had expected and it has continued to be good. I had been told that Danes were very had to get to know and that the didnt easily open themselves to new people. However, it wasnt quite like that! As long as i was the one to start the conversation, all of the students were very friendly and even offered to help me out for the first week or so. I am lucky to have another exchange student in my class and her name is Jamille. She is from Brazil and it is very interesting to talk with her because she speaks very little english, and obviuously very little danish! Lucky for us both though, she can understand spanish so i get to use my spanish skills to help her out and to practice my spanish. Kill two birds with one stone! But i have been in school for a total of three and a half weeks now and I am really starting to feel like this is the normal routine and like i am starting to fit in.

     Introcamp = best week ever!! Introcamp was by far one of the best weeks of my life! It was great to meet all the other exchange students that are living all over Denmark and see what they are going through. The school that we stayed at had planned tons of great activities, including danish lessons, sort of almost group therapy where we all talked about what we had been through and what we like and don't like about Denmark (it was really nice actually), a day trip to Århus, a trip to a museum in Århus, a private concert by Striving Vines (Danish band), and an awesome party at the end of the week! That was just to name a few things! Also, they had us eat quite a few traditional Danish foods, including the infamous rød grøde med flød (which is near impossible for foreigners to say and therefore all the Danes make us say it!). It was terrible at the end of the week when we all had to say goodbye and part ways...

     After Introcamp life pretty much went back to normal, well as normal as it can get for an exchange student! However, Monday I did not go to school because i had a horrible headache and my throat hurt something fierce! haha and to top it all off my host family doesn't use ANY painkillers! But I survived and was back to school the very next day unfortunately... i say that because Danish school is SO boring! most likely because i do not understand anything, but still. I was warned of this before, but it is worse than i ever imagined! And lunch is only 30 minutes :(

     Friday I was lucky though and got to skip school to go to Copenhagen to meet up with my counselor from the US, Jessica Prewitt. Along with her husband Jason and her old host brother (i think? haha) we toured Copenhagen and saw such things as the royal jewels, the inside of a really old castle, a beautiful park/garden in the sunshine for once, a very long shopping street in Copenhagen, and the changing of the guards! All in all it was a great day and i would like to thank her once again for it all! And I even made it there and home on the trains all by myself! YES!

     That following Saturday, my host family took me to their summer house on the "nicest beach in Denmark." It was sunny and warm and everything! The house is fairly old, but it is nice to have if you ever want to get away from home... even if it only is 30 minutes away (a long way to Danes). I didn't go swimming since it wasn't THAT warm, and the water was pretty cold, but we stayed there for the day. After that we went over to my host dad, Peer's, brother's house. My host brother and I went to the driving range and practiced up on our golf, which we figured wasn't quite as good as we thought, but none the less it was fun!

     This week so far has been pretty good also! Elections are currently happening in Denmark and it is always on TV as you can imagine... but it is nothing like elections in the US. They have very many political parties and very many candidates for prime minister, so it is harder to choose someone to vote for. School has been pretty normal as well. Today I started Karate and it actually went great! I really liked it and I am going to continue it.

     Well i think that is all for now, but i will really try to keep up on my blog more often! :) Hej Hej.

P.S. If you want to see pictures of my adventure here are the links:
Just random Denmark: http://www.facebook.com/media/set/?       set=a.1713808984435.72095.1814516975&l=45679a2fd9&type=1

Introcamp: http://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.1767572488489.74652.1814516975&l=bc6867b3c8&type=1

And the trip to Arhus: http://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.1767726252333.74663.1814516975&l=e0ac45c3b2&type=1


Sunday, August 14, 2011

Velkommen til Danmark!

     A week and one day ago, I arrived in the beautiful county of Denmark completely exhausted, jet-lagged, and at the same time pumped full of adrenaline! My body just wanted to sleep, but I was far too exctied to do that! I mean I was in Europe, in Denmark! I still had an hour and a half drive to get to my house, but I couldn't fall asleep. When I got to my house, I met the rest of my host family (my host mom, Hanne, picked me up at the airport) min far Peer, min bror Christian, og min søster Marie. They all greeted me so warmly and instantly made me feel at home! I made it through the rest of the day without sleep, but that night I slept great! The rest of the weekend, I got to know my host family and told them all about me and the US.

     Sunday, my host brother, sister, and I went to Lalandia. Lalandia is a huge swimming/bowling/eating/skiing/sauna-ing/everything.else.you.could.possibly.want.to.do-ing place. It was pretty awesome but like everywhere and everything else in Denmark, it is expensive! So we just went swimming and goat seeing! It was really fun though!

     Tuesday I went to the b-e-a-u-t-i-f-u-l city of Copenhagen. It doesn't matter how many pictures you see of a place, it is definitely better in person, and the same goes for Copenhagen. It is so old and it has such cool architecture! They definitely drive CRAZY though! :). I didn't see it all (I would need like 2 weeks for that), but i saw the little mermaid, Rundetårn, the Opera house, Amelienborg Palace, Nyhavn, and some other awesome, random buildings! We also stopped by Christiania, which is a whole city inside of Copenhagen. It has it's own laws, and is tax-free! It is pretty much a huge hippy community, but it is really cool!

     Friday, I went back to Copenhagen, but this time it was just to drop off my host sister, Marie, at the airport (she is going on exchange to Mexico). She took a bunch of her friends, and they all hugged and tried not to cry and everything like that :) but she landed safe and is now with her family over there. She says it's like a sauna because in Denmark it's averagely 60-65 right now and constantly raining (it's raining as I'm writing this :/ ) And in Mexico is like 90-100, so you can imagine how she is feeling!

     So as to my overall thoughts about Denmark after my first week? I actually love the food! I thought it would just be pretty plain and nothing special, but it is delicious! There are some strange things that i have never tasted before, but i have given them all a try and I've liked almost all of them (except pig skin... not my favorite). However... everything has to have some downfalls and the weather is Denmark's downfall. It has rained at least a little every single day I have been here and I have also worn pants everyday! That is very different that the kind of August weather that I am used to! They say this is one of the rainiest summers in the history of Denmark! But I guess it wouldn't be Denmark if it was 90 degrees and sunny everyday, and truthfully it is nice to get away from the heat I'm used to! So overall Denmark is great and I am so happy to be living in this awesome country :)

I start school Tomorrow and I'm not quite sure how that will go, but I will definitely talk about it on my next post!

Some strange things I've noticed:
-Some houses still have straw roofs!
-Every town is very old looking and it's super cool!
-Danes have very naughty humor!
-It's perfectly fine to cuss in front and with your parents
-Danes eat tons of fish (raw and cooked)
-They really do ride their bikes all over!
-They drive insanely!
-Cashiers and grocery stores sit down
-McDonald's in Denmark tastes much better!
-I can't remember anything else, but I know there is more!