Sunday, December 22, 2013

Semester One: Complete!! Have a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!


Hello everyone!!

This past week I finished my fourth sequence, which means....I have completed my first semester as an exchange student here in France!! Holy crap...where has the time gone?!

I had another presentation to give for my last class, and our group rocked! Then we took the final on Thursday and for the first time, I am positive that I did really well.  That was a good way to end semester one.  That night, some friends and I went out to eat raclette to celebrate.  This is a French cuisine.  You melt cheese in a little fire and put it over your food.  It was very good!  We had some drinks and went back to Ale's to hang out.  We had some good laughs and then went to a club where most of the exchange students were going to party that night as our last big event, and so we could all say goodbye!  It was a fantastic day, I laughed harder than I have in a long time, made a lot of memories, and by the end of the night we all had had so much alcohol, just walking was a serious project.  But man did we have fun!


Now I am sitting in my room, all packed and ready to go!  I am writing this and reflecting on the last four months of my life.  It is truly incredible how much my time here has changed and living here is now normal.  (Don't worry, not that I am going to stay, but in the sense that I am no longer completely lost!)  I have learned so much about myself, life, how to survive, France, business, and the world in general.  

Saying goodbye to friends these last few days has proven to be very difficult, especially with having a high probability of saying goodbye forever.  We all came here, most of us in very similar situations, and immediately friendships were born.  We were in a foreign place, without friends and family, so the other exchange students you are with really become family.  You lean on one another, support one another, and really mature together.  We have vowed to keep in touch and have made plans to visit each other and travel the world!


I leave for the airport in about an hour!  (So this post is going to be a lot shorter than I had wanted...I have so much to say!)  I fly out of Bordeaux and then go to Madrid, London, and then Chicago.  It is going to be quite the day, but soon enough I will finally be home!  I am super super excited to see family and friends! I have missed everyone so much and wouldn't have been able to do this without them.  I cannot thank everyone enough for all of their love, support, and kind words.  I AM JUST SO EXCITED TO COME HOME!!

Thank you everyone for reading, and for most of you, I will see you very very soon!

Joyeux Noel! (Merry Christmas)

-Krysta

"There are only two ways to live your life. One is as though nothing is a miracle.  The other is as though everything is a miracle."
-Albert Einstein 

"It's okay to be homesick.  It means you come from a good home.  There are plenty who would envy that."
-Downton Abbey

Thursday, December 12, 2013

Disneyland Paris!


Bonjour Everyone!

This past weekend, I ventured north to Disneyland Paris!!  Just so everyone knows, I am a HUGE Disney fan!  Most of my family even calls me "Belle" or "Krysta Belle." (Although, I am pretty sure most of them don't know where my nickname actually comes from.)  I got that nickname because I was obsessed with Belle from "Beauty and the Beast" when I was younger, and that name has stuck with me ever since.  Even as a 20 year old, and I love it! ; )  And if anyone wants to take me on in the game "Disney Scene It," bring it on! The only person who I know that can beat me every time is my older brother Justin, there is just no winning against him...darn you! Ok, yes, but my point...I LOVE Disney!!

*Little Fact: Disneyland isn't actually IN Paris.  It is 32km (about 20 miles) away from the city.  So I wasn't able to see Paris yet, but that is another trip for a different time!

This trip was organized by my school and most of the students that went were exchange students.  In total, there were 100 people that went.  We met close to the train station in Bordeaux, at 10:30 p.m. on Friday night for our departure.  We rode in two coach buses.  Yes, that was our "hotel" for the night.  We arrived at Disney at 7:30 in the morning, and we hit the ground running!  We all put our bags in the baggage room, had about sixty girls in one bathroom brushing their teeth and hair, and then jumped back on the bus to be transported to the parks.  We got there before they opened, so we ate a little breakfast in the parking lot while trying to find our roommates for later on that night.  We were randomly assigned and the girls in my room were all strangers to one another.  We said hi, and then everyone split up into groups and started to rush towards the gates to get in line.  In Disneyland Paris, there are two theme parks: Disneyland Park, and Walt Disney Studios Park.


None of my close friends came on this trip, but I really wanted to go.  So it was time to jump outside the box/comfort zone once again!  As our group was making their way to the park, I found my friend Marine.  I joined their group for the day.  There was seven of us, and two of them are exchange students who are also staying the entire year!! ( I believe there are less than 10 of us.)  So I was really excited to get to know them this weekend.  Once we entered the park, it was run run run all day long.  We went to as many rides as possible, grabbed a ridiculously overpriced lunch, went to more attractions, and watched the daily Disney parade, which of course is now Christmas themed, so we got to see Santa also!  After the parade, it was about 5:30, so we all walked back to our hotel, Hotel Cheyenne, and took a break.  Once we got there, we discovered that most of our keys didn't work, so we had to get that sorted out.  The hotel was cool, themed to look like the Wild West.  It was, however, incredibly spread out.  It took forever to walk to our building!

We went back to the parks to have supper together and then we pushed our way through the packed crowds to get a good view of Sleeping Beauty's Castle for the show.  The light/water/firework show that they put on was incredible!  I thought they did a great job, I was very impressed.  That was probably my favorite part of the trip!  Then we made our way back to the hotel around 11.  Everyone was extremely tired at this point! Once we got back, we discovered that there was a problem with the rooms.  Everything had gotten messed up and people were getting moved around and trying to find their lost luggage, it was a complete mess and quite the ordeal!! It provided for some good laughs and stories though.  The three girls I ended up staying with were all different people than who I was originally supposed to stay with.  Two of them were from Quebec in Canada and the other was from France.  They were all very nice and we ended up getting along very well and spending the next day together.  Late, late at night, with sore, aching bodies, and very heavy eye lids, we finally got some rest.  Then ring ring ring, the alarms went off at 6 and we were back up!  We got ready, packed, put our luggage back in the luggage room and were at breakfast at 7.  We ate, formed our groups, and it was back to the park to do as much as possible before we left at 3!


The weekend was very tiring, but completely worth it!! I had such a fun time, and met a lot of new people!!  The parks were pretty much what I expected them to be like.  I have also traveled to Tokyo Disneyland and DisneyWorld in Florida.  DisneyWorld is by far the best, and I believe it always will be.  It is also a lot larger than the other ones.  I think my next favorite is Tokyo and then Paris, but that is a very close call!  They all have a lot of similarities and many of the same attractions.  On another note, the hotel that we stayed at this weekend was not very impressive.  It honestly looked as if it hadn't been touched since 1965.  It definitely was not what I was expecting for a Disney hotel on Disney property...but hey it was all for the experience!  No matter where you are in the world, and regardless if you are a Disney fan or not, DisneyLand/World is an experience everyone should do at least once in their life!

Leaving the Wonderful World of Disney was very hard to do, especially because homework and an intense group project and presentation awaited my return.  How thoughtful of them.  There they were, all too eager to greet me when I finally got back to my apartment around midnight on Sunday night.  I had to wake up at 6 for class on Monday and was there until 4:45, that was rough.  Tomorrow my team and I present our half hour presentation, but I feel good about this one!  Wish me luck! : )

My countdown: 10 days until I leave...11 days until I am home!!!!!

Thank you everyone for reading!

-Krysta

"Today's special moments are tomorrow's memories."
-Genie, The Return of Jafar

"I am on my way, I can go the distance.  I don't care how far, somehow I'll be strong.  I know every mile will be worth my while.  I will go most anywhere to find where I belong."
-Hercules 

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Saint Emilion, France

Bonjour Everyone!!

I hope everyone had a wonderful Thanksgiving! I sure did! My family sent over a little package with all of the ingredients to make a wonderful, and proper, Thanksgiving meal.  On Thursday, some of my relatives were at my house for a party, so I was also able to Skype with a group of them and see their lovely smiling faces. Words cannot describe how much I love and miss them! They are so loving, supportive, and well...awesome!  I am so thankful for them.  I also got to watch my Packers play, but after that game, I will not dive into details.

Last week, I finished my third sequence!!  I had to give a presentation with another student.  It was very nerve-racking, but I think it went well.  We had to look at a case study for a company, and then explain through a power point how the company used a sub brand to target new emerging customers and how they changed and adapted their industrial marketing segmentation techniques in a business-to-business environment.  Then we had to defend our case in a Q&A session.  Super exciting stuff right? haha No.  Then it was final time.  I think my final went well also, but I won't get my grades for a few months...so let's hope it was good! 


To celebrate the end of our sequence, some friends and I went out to eat and get a few drinks.  After, we went walking around town and ended up at a very cute Christmas Bazaar.  We shopped around for a while, got some desert, hot wine, and sat under the Christmas lights.  We then decided that the next day, Saturday, we should venture out of the city and into the country.  So we made plans to head to a very famous little village, Saint Emilion.  


On Saturday morning, we all met at Gare St. Jean, Bordeaux's train station.  It was about a 45 minute train ride into the country.  When we got off of the train, we were kind of surprised at first.  There was literally just a little shelter, and a sign that said "Saint Emilion."  My friend Alejandra said "Oh my God, we are literally in the middle of nowhere..."  There were a few other people that got off at that stop also, and they too looked confused.  The strangers started to walk down a road and we followed them.  We didn't know what else to do.  After a little bit, we could see the little village in the distance and we were at ease once again.  It was about a twenty minute walk from the train station. 

Saint Emilion is a small medieval town that produces a lot of wine and is a popular spot for tourists.  While we were there, we did a lot of exploring and sightseeing.  It is such a pretty town, exactly what I pictured an old French town to look like.  It is built in the hills, so all of the buildings are close but on different levels and the little stone streets wind and curve.  The architecture is captivating and you really feel like you are in the Middle Ages.  I loved it!  We decided to grab a late lunch while there, which was delicious, and looked at a few shops.

On our hike back to the train station, we ran into some exchange students that we go to school with.  Our group then grew from 6 to 8.  When we reached the train station, we realized that it is so remote, you can't even buy tickets.  We panicked a little at first, but others said it was normal to just get on the train at this station.  Alright, I guess.  There were about 20 other people waiting for the train, which happened to be a half hour late.  Another time of minor panic.  We just kept saying "Stranded in France." 


On the ride back, we decided to have a party at Alejandra's.  We all went grocery shopping together and headed to her flat for a fun filled night.  There were 6 nationalities, and conversations in 4 languages.  There was a lot of alcohol, laughter, and games.  We tried playing a card game where you have to count numbers out loud.  We thought it would be fun to give the game a twist and count in 3 mixed languages.  Let me tell you, trying to play a game and count "Uno, two, trois, quatre, five, six, siete, huit, neuf, diez" is a lot harder than you might think!  We also learned some phrases and words in Polish, and taught the little Dutch we learned from Amsterdam.  Once the alcohol got to the right level, there was dancing, so much dancing...but it was such a fun night! 


This week has been pretty good so far.  I started my 4th sequence yesterday!  I am now in "Decision Making for Supply Chain Management."  I have 3 really close friends in this class, so this class shouldn't be too bad.  Last night, Alejandra and I went out for some crepes, a French desert.  Very yummy, and a good way to start our last sequence together.  

Something else that has just been a bundle of fun is that my bank accounts decided to have a mysterious problem this week.  Conveniently right when I needed to pay my rent.  I sent a message to my mother that my newest adventure could be "Homeless in France."  She didn't seem to find the humor in that statement.  So I guess it is a good thing that everything was straightened out and I am still allowed to live here. ; )  Just another notch to put on my "What Else Could Possibly Go Wrong While Abroad" list.  That list seems to continuously grow...

Now that we are in December (already?? yikes!!) I have allowed myself to officially have a countdown until I come home for Christmas break!! Here it is: 19 Days Until I Leave...20 Days Until I am Home : )

This weekend I am off to Disneyland Paris and I am super excited!!!!! I should have some fun stories from that!!

Thank you all for reading!

-Krysta

"The journey of a thousand miles begins with one step."
-Lao Tzu



Monday, November 25, 2013

Amsterdam, Netherlands!!


Hallo!! (Hello in Dutch!)

From November 16th to the 19th, my two friends, Alejandra and Daniela, and I went to Amsterdam in the Netherlands!!  We had an awesome time!  The city is spectacular and so beautiful.  It is built on a bunch of canals and water ways.  The picture above is literally what it looked like wherever you went!  There were cute bridges all over, and swans were always swimming in the water.  It was very picturesque.  Also, as many of you may know, Amsterdam is a very...well, uh...open place.  A lot of things are shown if you catch my drift, so it was definitely an experience.  

On Saturday, we met at the airport in Bordeaux.  Once there, we were told that our flight, on RyanAir, was delayed four hours due to the heavy fog in Eindhoven!  When we finally got on the plane and were flying, they still didn't know where we were going to land.  The pilot said we would probably land close by in Germany, and get bused to Holland.  At the last minute, they announced that we would be able to land in Eindhoven (the original plan.)  We were one of only two flights that were able to land there that day!  

Since our flight was delayed so long, we didn't get into Eindhoven until around 9:00 pm.  Then we took about a twenty minute bus ride to the train station, and an hour and a half train ride to Amsterdam.  Finally we arrived!!  It was a good thing we decided to wait to buy transportation tickets until we arrived, otherwise we would have lost all of our tickets and money from being late!  From the train station, we walked for about twenty minutes in search of our hostel.  That was the first time I had ever stayed in a hostel, and it was better than I was anticipating, which was a relief!  Also, our hostel was located directly on the Red Light District.  I was not aware of this until we arrived!  Talk about a surprise. hahaha If you are not completely sure what it is, Google it, but at your own risk. Seriously.  It isn't appropriate for me to write about. ; ) We dropped our stuff off and headed out in search of a bar! 


The next day we went in search of breakfast and got incredibly lost.  It is an old European city built on water, so of course it doesn't make sense.  We had a map, asked multiple people where we were, and we still couldn't tell you which way was north.  Being my father's daughter, I have an excellent sense of direction, but this city was kicking my butt.  After a few hours, we gave up.  We walked until we found a tram, made our way back to the Central Station, and just started completely over.  *A tip that I have learned in Europe: as soon as (or even before) you arrive in a new city, become good friends with the city's public transportation.  It really does make everything a whole lot easier!  For just 12€, we were able to buy a ticket to have complete access to the metro, trams, and buses for 48 hours.  

*Side note: every single person we talked to spoke perfect English.  I loved that!  It made it so easy to get around, and for the first time in months, I heard people speak English regularly!  What a change! : )
*Second side note: for the places that we visited, we bought our tickets online before we left for the trip.  This was very nice!  We could carry less money on us, and we didn't have to worry about getting in, or waiting in the long lines.  We just walked in like we owned the place. ; )

After finally finding where we were, we got something to eat.  I had a muffin, the other two had a bagel.  We ate that on our way to the Vincent van Gogh museum.  This was very cool.  The museum was quite large, 4 stories.  We saw most of his artwork, old paint brushes, materials, everything!  We spent hours there.  My favorite piece by Van Gogh is "A Starry Night," but it wasn't there.  I believe it is in New York City at the moment.  

From there we made a quick stop at the famous "I amsterdam" sign for a nice photo opportunity!  It was very crowded, but we anticipated that!





Next it was off to the original Heineken Brewery, now called the Heineken Experience.  This was easily one of the coolest museum type experiences I have ever had!  It starts off as a normal museum with all of the interesting facts and history.  We got to see the old parts of the factory and the old tanks.  We walked past the Heineken Horses, which are still a part of the brewing process today!  Then it turns into a more modern and interactive experience.  We went into a theater that explains the brewing process, but from the beer's point of view.  We became the beer!  We stood on a platform that moves (freaked us out because we didn't know it moved.)  As we were poured from place to place, the platform dropped and moved so we felt like we were in the movie.  When anything splashed, water and bubbles came out of the ceiling.  When we were being cooked, giant heat lamps turned on.  It was quite fun and we got a good laugh out of it.  Next we were off to our beer tasting.  As we drank, we played a game where we could win more beer.  Ale won two additional glasses of beer, so her and I gulped down two glasses each.  Let me just say, probably the best tasting beer ever! We don't know if it was just the environment, or the thought of being there, but the beer was fantastic!

The rest of the Experience we went from room to room where we could take fun pictures, sing karaoke, make videos, play games, become a DJ in a club, sit in a theater and watch Heineken commercials, and watch bottles be filled and capped.  The last room is a cool bar where each person gets two additional free glasses of beer.  May I remind you that we had very little to eat, about eight hours prior to this, and then drank 4 glasses in a very short amount of time.  Let's just say we were having some fun.  Then we toured the gift shop, bought some fun things, and went in search of food, lots of food!  What a great business tactic though.  Give the tourists free beer, just enough to the point of "fun tipsy," and then lead them straight into a fun gift shop where everything now looks "super cool" and "must have" because hey, "when will I ever be able to come back?!" *Gold mine*


Above picture: Our fourth round of delicious beer!
Below picture: my very own customized Heineken beer bottle, made at the original brewery, with my name on the label! Yeah, I am a little proud of it!


The next morning we found a Starbucks for some breakfast and did a little sightseeing again.  We then went to the Sex Museum.  I don't have pictures of that for obvious reasons.  It was interesting, only cost 4€, and hey, when in Amsterdam...

Then it was the fun task of searching for our next location, which we only had to stop and ask directions for four times.  We were getting better!  But we finally arrived at the Anne Frank House and Museum!


We opted for an introduction to the museum, for just a few euros more.  The introduction was a half hour, and in English.  We sat in a room that had pictures and stories all over the walls.  The presenter followed a timeline of pictures and explained Anne Frank's story, as well as events that were affecting the world.  On a table was a book of names of all of the Holocaust victims from the Netherlands.  This book is very large and is read out loud every four years.  They don't do it every year because it takes four days and four nights to read it.  This is only for one country.  There was also an original yellow star that the Jews were forced to sew onto their clothes, laying on the table.

Once in the actual museum, we could no longer take pictures, but I will never forget it.  The building in which her family hid was her father's business building.  We walked through the whole building, where all of the storage rooms and old offices were.  On all of the walls were quotes from Anne Frank's diaries.  There were pictures to show what the building used to look like, and videos that you could stop and watch.  One video was of a friend of Anne's.  This friend was not Jewish, therefor she was not in the camps.  She did manage to find Anne through the fence when Anne was later put in Auschwitz.  The friend threw a small package of necessities over the fence to Anne, and that was the last time she ever saw her.  

The hiding place of the family was located in the back house of the building.  The entrance was covered up by a movable bookcase which is still there today.  We passed through this secret opening, and were in the actual hiding place of Anne Frank.  When the family was discovered, the Nazis took all of the belongings from the family. Anne's dad Oscar, the only survivor, wanted the rooms to stay empty.  He wanted  to show how they were empty of belongings, empty of life.  Everything had been ripped away from them.  When the museum first opened, Oscar set the rooms back up to the best of his memory for the sake of taking pictures, but everything was removed again.  On the walls of these rooms were the pictures of what the rooms once looked like.  In the room that Anne and her sister stayed in, there were still the drawings and magazine clippings that they put up to make the place more cheerful. 

We got to look around the entire living quarters, and then we entered another part of the museum.  Here were interviews of her dad, Oscar, as well as others.  The final room had the actual diaries of Anne Frank on display.  The room was very dim so the light wouldn't damage the books, and they are kept in very thick glass cases with high security.  The book has been translated into over 70 languages! (Who even knew the world had that many) A lot of these different versions were also on display.  

In 1959, there was a movie made, called The Diary of Anne Frank.  That year, the actress Shelley Winters won The Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her role in this movie.  This Academy Award is on display and is the last thing you see before leaving the museum.  As a major movie buff, and an avid viewer of the Academy Awards, seeing one in person was absolutely awesome.  But it was a complete honor to have seen one for a movie such as this.

It is hard to properly express what it was like to have an experience like this.  It was a humbling, amazing, truly once in a lifetime experience.  For that, I am deeply grateful.
  

The rest of our night was more sightseeing.  We went to a cute park for some pictures.  We got a traditional Dutch pastry from a street vendor and stopped by the "I amsterdam" sign one last time.  We went back to the hostel, had more beer and had some "girl time."  Then we were up bright and early to make our way back to France.  On the journey back, I took control of the group and showed them what it was like to be on "Krysta Time."  Krysta, being one of the most punctual, over prepared people you will ever meet!  The two people I was with are almost always late to everything!  I made sure that we were not only on time to everything, but early with time to spare!  They laughed when we finally arrived at the airport and said "I will have to say, Krysta, this is nice.  Being here on time, not having to stress, and actually being able to stop and get food and coffee is nice!!"  It is a lot less stressful on "Krysta Time." : )


Amsterdam, you treated us well! Thank you for a fantastic time!!

Thank you to everyone for reading, hope you enjoyed my stories!

-Krysta

"Those who have courage and faith, shall never perish in misery."
-Anne Frank

Monday, November 11, 2013

Two Down, Seven To Go!


Bonjour everyone!

This past Thursday I took my final for my second sequence, Air Transportation and Tourism Economics!!  I really enjoyed the material of the class, but had to give my first presentation.  I was in a group with 3 French girls and we had to give a half hour presentation followed by a Q&A session.  Not my favorite thing to do, and the whole process was a lot different from what I am used to in Green Bay, so I am glad that it is over! Whew! It did go quite well though, so that is good! : )  Two sequences down, seven to go.  Time is flying by.  This week I will be starting Business to Business and Industrial Marketing. oy...

As I was going to school last week, I saw something that was awesome!!! ...well, a "Krysta" type of awesomeness!  I was getting off the bus to go to my final when I noticed a man wearing a rather remarkable hat.  It was a Green Bay Packers hat!!!! That was the first time I saw NFL apparel in Bordeaux, and what better team to be represented than the Packers?!  I took it as a sign!  I was so excited to watch the Packers vs. Eagles game this weekend because it was the first time that Clay Matthews and his brother Casey played against each other in the NFL! The excitement that I speak of was quickly shot, due to obviously reasons on Sunday.  Reasons that I would rather not repeat.  Despite all that has happened to the team this season, keep faith guys!  The last time we looked like this we won the Super Bowl!!  Not to mention, I was a year away from being in high school when our school went to state for football, a year away from going to college in Green Bay when the Packers won the Super Bowl, so it only seems fitting that they will win while I am in a different country! ; )




This is something totally random, but I would like to talk about bathrooms!  In the U.S., if you are ever in public, you will find a bathroom.  Also, you will usually find a bubbler (a water fountain for the rest of the world.)  In Europe, that is not the case.  Bubblers are really hard to find, there is not a single one at my school!!  Bathrooms are also really hard to find, and quite often, you have to pay to use them.  I was in the train station last week and really needed to use the bathroom.  We searched for a good ten minutes before finding the only bathroom in the building, and then I had to pay to use it!  I find that interesting.  Also, not all of them offer toilet paper.  So here is some advice while abroad: Always carry some sort of tissue, and go to the bathroom if you get the opportunity, even if you don't think you have to.  You never know when you will find one next. 

These past few days have been very quiet and relaxing!  I am in the middle of another little break, and I don't have any school work because I am in between two sequences!  This has given me some time to catch up with people at home! I was able to Skype with my good friend Kari again!  She will be visiting me with a group of people in February, and we are both very excited!!  I also got to talk to my little brother Ryan, and our friends Bridget and Liam down in Madison!  I know Ryan struggles with communication, so I would like to say he is doing great with school and life!  He is really enjoying Madison, and I am so proud of him!  Also, while I was talking to  my parents, my uncle Chipper stopped by!  It was educational as usual, but amusing!

Next weekend I will be traveling to Amsterdam!!  My friends and I have been planning our trip over the last few days, and it is looking very exciting!!

Thank you everyone for reading!

-Krysta

"Don't worry about failures, worry about the chances you miss when you don't even try." 
-Jack Canfield

Monday, November 4, 2013

Amy Comes to Visit!


Hello Everyone!

This past week was great!  My friend, Amy, came to visit me for a few days!  We went to junior high and high school together.  Then I went off to UWGB and she went off to Missouri.  Currently, she is studying in Manchester, England for the year.  It had been a year and a half since we last saw each other.  I still remember her phone call back in March when we both figured out we would be studying abroad in Europe at the same time.  We made plans back then to see each other, and now we made it happen! 

As Amy made her way south to Bordeaux, she ran into some bumps on the journey here.  She had problems with her flight, with her train, communicating, it just wasn't pleasant.  A few hours later then planned, I went to the train station to pick her up.  It was quite exciting!  We made our way back to my apartment, went grocery shopping for the week, and then talked all night.  We had a lot to catch up on!  We had a lot of fun talking about the new and exciting things we have experienced, but we also had a nice vent session on the difficulties and fears of being here.  We had some good laughs from that!  We stayed in, cooked a yummy supper, and drank a bottle of wine!


The next day, I gave her the grand tour of Bordeaux.  It is such a beautiful city, so it was still exciting for me also!  We tried different treats and French food.  For lunch we got sandwiches from a little shop, and they were delicious!  The French are really good at making sandwiches!  We went back, relaxed for a while, and ventured out again to see the city at night!  And of course, we made our way to my favorite "The Cock and Bull" for some drinks!  When we got in for the night, we Skyped our friend Nanna and had a very entertaining conversation at 3 in the morning.

On Thursday (Halloween!!!!), we kept it easy and relaxed.  We got more sandwiches from a different shop by Hotel de Ville.  Then I took her to see my school.  After that we were off to the Bordeaux Wine and Trade Museum, which was very cool!  After we went through the museum, we had a wine tasting!! Amy was super excited, it was her first wine tasting! And what better place to have one than the wine capital of the world?!  We bought a bottle of wine and were off to find a place to eat for dinner.  French don't really celebrate Halloween, so we didn't have many options for entertainment, but we loved seeing some decorations.  We settled on a Mexican restaurant.  The food was delicious, the Margarita was amazing, but the Pina Colada was horrible!  I shivered just at the smell!  Horrible drink makes for a sad dinner! haha But we still loved the rest.  That night we got to talk to our friend Sara for a while! Then we opened a bottle of wine and watched Hocus Pocus for Halloween!! One of my absolute favorite movies!! (We also had a bucket full of candy to complete Halloween! haha)


Friday we were off to the ocean!! We went to this very pretty town called Arcachon.  It looked a lot like Florida!  It was a really good day, and there were so many pretty views!  We played on the beach and walked in the water for a while.  The water was a bit cold, but nothing a Wisconsin girl couldn't handle!  I was really tempted to jump in, but I didn't have extra clothes!  To get to the ocean, we had to take a train.  That was my first train in Europe!  All of the announcements were in French, but we made it there and back just fine!  Watch out, I am becoming an experienced traveler! ; )  When we got back we went to the city center, watched a puppet sing opera, and bought some Macarons!  I love them.  We had to get up early the next morning to get to the train station, so we stayed in that night and watched another one of my favorite movies!  Ever After, it takes place in France!!


Amy's journey back to Manchester started out rough again, she missed her train!  We got everything cleared up though and she made it back safe and sound!  We also started planning my trip to England!  I don't know when and I don't know how, but I will be going there!

At this point, I was all alone in Bordeaux.  Everyone I knew had gone somewhere or gone home for our week break and weren't returning until the next day, on Sunday.  So I had some "Krysta" time and mostly worked on a project that I have to present tomorrow.  I am very nervous for that!!  I was able to take some breaks from school work for Skype though!  I got to talk to my parents again.  I had a lovely conversation with my younger cousin Courtney.  Also, I was able to talk to my little cousins that I babysit, Taylor and Peyton!  We talked for 45 whole minutes!  They had so much to show me, Taylor told me a bedtime story, and then we played in their fort for a while!  It was very cool!  My little brother, Tyler, was babysitting them, so I got to talk to him for a while also!

It was a very nice and relaxing week!  Now it is back to classes!

Thank you for reading! Love everyone and miss everyone!

-Krysta

"If you hear music, dance."
-Disney

Monday, October 28, 2013

Halloween is Here!


Hello everyone and Happy Halloween!!

This past week was busy, but went by very fast.  My building is updating, and it was time for my flat to get a new bed, so I now have a new bed...yay!!  I finally have all of my immigration things done and I am so happy about that!  I also bought my ticket for a weekend trip to Disney Paris, a plane ticket for a trip to Amsterdam, and my friends and I are talking about a possible weekend trip to Rome!!!  I am super excited for these upcoming trips!!

This weekend, some of my friends and I ordered Domino's pizza.  I was surprised to find out that the pizza tasted almost exactly like Domino's at home!  Yummy!  They just had fewer options.  Also, I found out that stuffed crust pizza is a foreign concept here.  They are missing out!

Halloween just happens to be an obsession of mine.  Horror movies are the best kind of movies.  Anything that includes haunted, horror, terror, etc. is like music to my ears!  The season of fear is my favorite time of year! haha  Now that you know this, you can imagine my severe disappointment in finding out that France really doesn't celebrate it.  Young children generally dress up and will sometimes go "Trick or Treating," but beyond that, there isn't much celebration.  I was happy to see some people dressed up at the bars!  No one celebrates this holiday like the Americans though!  Lately, I have been getting a lot of questions about how Halloween is celebrated in the U.S., other people find it fascinating! 

We went to the fair again, and there was a haunted house there! Let's just say I could barely contain my excitement!! It was Universal Studios "Live Horror Show."  Everything was based on the legendary horror films!! A four foot "Billy the Puppet," the puppet that Jigsaw uses in "Saw," led you into the house.  It was filled with all the scary Freddy, Jason, Michael, etc.  At the end you were chased by Thomas Hewitt, aka "LeatherFace," who had a chainsaw, obviously.  It is one of the best houses I have ever been in!  I grew up watching all of these movies and having the terror memorized in my mind.  Then I went through this house and found myself in the same scenarios with the same killers that I have watched in movies my entire life.  It...was...awesome!!!  haha I know what you are thinking: "Wow, this is kind of twisted."  Don't worry, I have been told this before! ; )  You just have to love scary movies!

After that we went to Alejandra's apartment to hang out and have drinks.  (The picture below is the view from her apartment...so jealous!! It is beautiful!)  We listened to music and danced, and then decided to play some cards!  We had so much fun teaching each other games, I cried I was laughing so hard.  They said that they had heard of the game "Bull Shit," and wanted to learn.  So I taught them.  Ernesto just couldn't get the concept.  It was like he was in a different game all together most of the time, but we got a good laugh out of it!


Sunday was amazing!  Just like every Sunday, I had a Skype date with my family.  My whole family was home, and Matt and Jaime's family was also there to watch the Packer game!  It was loud, obnoxious, and hilarious as our home always is, and it just warmed my heart to see it.  I "sat" at the table with them as they ate.  My father's birthday is on the 29th, so we also watched him open up his birthday presents!  Thank God for modern technology!!! 

Also, because I have the coolest parents in the world, they logged into my laptop and hooked it up to their Dish TV.  Now I can watch and DVR American television! Which also means, yes...you guessed it, I can watch my Green Bay Packers again!!!  Watching live updates on ESPN worked, but man I am ecstatic to have American Television.  Thank you again!!  Also, I can now watch all of the Halloween Marathons and ghost shows that are flooding TVs right now.  I can watch "Hocus Pocus" on the 31st.  I watch that movie on Halloween every single year.  It is one of my all time favorites, and we share a birth year.  It was made in '93!!

This coming week I am on our Fall Break.  My friend Amy is coming to live with me!  I pick her up at the train station tomorrow!!  We grew up together and she is currently studying abroad in Manchester, England.  After being gone for almost two months now, we are both very excited to see a familiar face!  I am sure I will have many stories for this coming week!

Happy birthday Dad, I love you!!!

Thanks for reading and I hope everyone has a spook-tacular Halloween! : )

-Krysta

"Don't just fly, soar."
-Dumbo

Sunday, October 20, 2013

It Really is a Small World After All


Hello Everyone!

This first picture is to celebrate my excitement.  Ever since the very first day I arrived, there has been construction right outside my window.  I enjoyed waking up to loud blasting noises ..early...every...single...morning, but man am I happy to see them cleaning things up now!! They brought in a huge crane to get the other cranes and supplies off of the building.  Hopefully more peaceful mornings are in my near future!

I have started my second course, "Air Transport and Tourism Economics."  This class, like all of them, is three weeks long, but we have three professors teaching us three different subjects.  It is a little intense, but I have just started.  The material is interesting, and I hope it continues to be interesting!


Regular life in Bordeaux continues to get better and better!  On Wednesday night, I went to an event hosted by the school at a wine bar.  We had the entire cellar to ourselves, drank great wine, and talked with friends.  It was a good night.  The weekend was even better!  There was a lot of drinks and laughs.  On Friday we went out for Thai food and then went to one of my favorite bars The Cock and Bull.  I had a bit to drink that night, but as usual, I was very responsible and safe! : )  On Saturday, some of us went to the fair that is in town, "La Feria."  That was a lot of fun.  I found it interesting that most of the names on the rides or signs by all of the vendors are mostly in English.  For a moment, I forgot where I was and thought I was back in Wisconsin!  We were going to go into the haunted house but ran out of time.  So we will be going back to do that because I love haunted houses!! After, we met some friends for dinner to celebrate one of their birthdays!  We didn't even start eating until 11:00, everything is done later in France.  But, we had Indian food and it was delicious! 

Quick side note: My friend, Amy, and I have known each other a long time.  We went to high school together and are really close friends.  She is currently studying abroad in Manchester, England for the year.  We both have fall break next week and she just booked her tickets to France and is going to live with me for the break!!! I am very excited! 


Finally, I would like to share how small our world really is!  I chose to go to somewhere completely new and foreign to me.  I went 4,000 miles away from home and still became friends with someone and then discovered we had ties to each other!  My friend Alejandra is from Mexico City.  She is dating a guy named Vito.  Vito used to work at the college program at Disney in Florida.  While there, he became good friends with another worker, Darren.  Darren and I went to school together and grew up in the same very small town in rural Wisconsin!!  Of the 7 billion people in this world, the 4 of us have a connection over 3 different countries.  I just learned that yesterday, and I thought that was so awesome!!

To end, as many of you know, my grandfather passed away on October 10th.  He lived a very good and long life, and left quite the legacy!  It has been hard being so far away from my family and being alone, but I am doing good.  I would just like to take this moment to celebrate his life!  Love you, grandpa!

Thank you everyone for reading!!

-Krysta

"Believe you can and you're halfway there."
-Theodore Roosevelt

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Food, Friends, and Some Thoughts


 

Bonjour everyone!!

I am already in the last week of my first sequence! My final is on Friday and, to be honest, I am very nervous!! So I am taking a study break to write to you. : )

In my cute little flat, I have a small kitchen that doesn't have an oven.  So I am somewhat limited as to what I can make.  I am finally becoming bold in the grocery store and learning how to use the computers to get fresh fruits and veggies! (It's a bit different here)  It is still a little bit difficult to get food because I can't read labels.  I can get the overall idea from the pictures, and I am starting to learn some words, but I don't like that I can't read the directions and ingredients before hand.  So I still stick to what I know is safe.  One of my favorite meals this week was the one pictured above.  I sauteed peppers, onions, and chicken in olive oil and my favorite seasonings.  Then put that on a wrap with lettuce and chopped tomatoes! It was quite yummy!


This weekend, some friends and I got together to make a meal and have some drinks!  It was quite the entertaining night.  We are all from different countries: U.S.A., Chile, Mexico, and Canada.  We always have fun talking about our homes and all the differences from place to place.  We were on Google Maps showing each other our neighborhoods and how different they are.  I had tried explaining to them just how small my town is.  They didn't quite understand until it was my turn to show them.  I went around the block and pointed to the ones that were relatives (which is pretty much every house.)  They were amazed! "I have literally never seen anything like that!" they all said!  My town is quite unique! My favorite part though was when they said "That is so cool, hey zoom out so we can see the whole town!" I laughed hard and said "uhhh, nope, that would be it!"  Again, they were amazed! I love my small town!


For supper, Ernesto (from Chile) made us some Chilean Hot Dogs! Let me tell you, they were delicious!  Earlier, we had gone shopping for the ingredients.  There was some miscommunication, and sausages were bought instead of actual hot dogs.  The meal was just as good though! We just kept calling them our "Fake Chilean Hot Dogs."  Also, someone (but I won't mention names) burned half of the buns.  They opened the oven and a cloud of smoke rolled out.  The bread was rock solid.  It provided for some good laughs though! 




As I was coming home from class the other day, I decided to check out a little bakery close to my apartment.  I was standing there and thought "Krysta, you are in the land of pastries and bread, and you have yet to try a croissant.  What is wrong with you?"  So I got a lovely croissant and was on my way.  Let me just say, if you even kind of like croissants, you would absolutely LOVE them here!! It was delicious!!


To finish, I would like to share some things I have noticed that I think are pretty cool! Of the people that I have met, most of them say how much they love the U.S. and how they have been there several times, or they really want to go!!  We all know it is a very large country, but I guess I never put that much thought into it until being by all these small countries.  America really is huge, and has sooo many things to offer and explore!  Some people also find it interesting that I am used to my one country having several different time zones.  And how I am used to seeing TV shows and programs listed with their premiere times.  Or how on New Years Eve, we all watch the ball drop on Times Square, but we watch recordings of it at different times.  In smaller countries, a TV show is on at 8.  That is it, just 8 o'clock.  No 8/7 Central or anything like that.  It is these little differences that I find interesting.  

Also, something that I hear a lot is "You don't realize how lucky you are that English is your first language."  Many people from other countries have a desire to learn this language.  It is the international language, and no matter where you go, chances are, you will be able to survive on English.  Some of my friends are very good at speaking it, but they don't have the confidence yet.  I will tell them "You have been studying English for several years, and your speech is very good!"  They always say "Yes, but you have had the opportunity to study it for twenty years, you don't realize how nice that is."  Love your English language!

I also enjoy the fact that I get to share some of my knowledge! I have always loved teaching and sharing with people, and I get to do that here often.  Most of the people I talk to are non-native English speakers.  I rarely have a conversation that doesn't include: How do you spell...What is the word for...How do you pronounce...What is another name for??  Many people ask me questions about English and I love it!  

By the way, now that I have said I am helping many people with their English, do not judge mine from this blog!  It is my way of sharing, and I don't really pay attention to my grammar or how well I write.  When helping others though, I do my best to provide them with correct English! ; )

Thank you for reading! I hope to have some new adventures to share soon!

-Krysta 

"The way to get started is to quit talking and begin doing."
-Walt Disney

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

French Class and Fun

(This is the river in the park.)

Hello everyone!

I am now in my second week of my French class, and let me say...yikes!! I enjoy it, but it is quite intensive.  Our professor, Freddy, teaches us French by only speaking French.  I understand that by doing this, we are forced to try really hard and really pay attention, but for complete beginners in this language it is difficult!  If we don't know what he is saying by the 6th or 7th guess, Freddy will then switch and say a word in English to give us a hint, and then it is back to trying to figure it out.  We took our first tests yesterday and got them back today. I did pretty darn good and I was not expecting that! Excuse me for a second while I pat myself on the back. ; )

The first things that I mastered were learning the alphabet and being able to count.  I am pretty proud to now know the numbers because the French system is different than ours, and to be honest, a little weird.  They count 1 through 69 the same as we do. But then it gets a little difficult. For the 70s, they use 60 plus 10-19.  So 75 would be like us saying sixty fifteen.  The 80s and 90s are also different and even worse. And I won't even get started on how to say a year like 1993.  I can also introduce myself and participate in everyday casual small talk: "How are you?"..."What is your nationality, address, phone number?" and so forth.  I know the days of the week and terms that go along with them such as: morning, afternoon, night, tomorrow, yesterday, etc..  We have learned random phrases to help us get along in French life.  Now we are practicing grammar, verbs, a lot of food vocabulary, and many other things.  We do not get bored in this class!!
   

(This is Rue Sainte Catherine on a normal Saturday...packed!)

This past weekend I had some fun! My friend, Marine, and I did some shopping on Rue Sainte Catherine.  There were so many people! Then we went to Baillardran to get some famous French pasteries.  The Baillardran in Bordeaux invented the Canele, so of course it is a must to get one from there when in Bordeaux!  It was delicious! We also got some Macarons that were also delicious! Then we walked to a park that was very pretty and had a little river going through it.  We walked all over the city, followed the river for a while, and then went back to Marine's apartment for some coffee and girl talk!  She showed me a lot of pictures from her travels to the United States.  And of course I had to take a good twenty minutes to talk about the Green Bay Packers and Clay Matthews!!  The other day she said she was researching Clay Matthews! haha I am taking my Packer love international!! : )  Then we went out to dinner, got some pizza, and then it was off to the movies!  We went to see "Ain't Them Body Saints."  It was in English with French subtitles, so that was awesome!  It was a good movie!  On Sunday, my friend Lindsey and I went out to dinner.  We got some very yummy cheeseburgers and wine! Both of these days had bad weather though.  It rained so hard the streets were turning into little rivers.  I walked through puddles that went above my ankles.  My clothes were so soaked I could wring them out! But it was still a good weekend!

Last night there was a party at the night club Torito.  It was called "The Buddy" party.  It was meant for international students to find a French buddy.  It is a thing they do in France, so then if the international student ever needs help or has questions, they can go to their French buddy.  Usually you just get one assigned to you, but that wasn't working for our school.  So this year, we were able to pick our own.  Marine and I had already wanted to be each others "Godmother/niece," but we went anyways to meet more people and have fun! It was also a good night!  

Oh...also, I got a care package last week and I just want to say thank you again! It was so amazing! Today, two of my favorite movies showed up in the mail.  Thank you for that also.  I feel so blessed!!

Thank you all for reading! (I will try to post more often!!)

-Krysta  : )

"Don't wait. The time will never be just right."
-Napoleon Hill