readingredhead: (Rain)

I spent three nights and two full days of this weekend in Rome. I was there for a week or so during July, and this was my fourth trip there in total (the first being six years ago, when I was just fourteen), but every time I visit, the city has something new to give me. This time, I met up with my friend Andy, who’s studying at Trinity College in Dublin for this school year and who had always wanted to go to Rome but had never even been to Europe until his trip to Dublin. With my more-than-average knowledge of the history, myth, legend, geography, and even language of Rome, I led us on a two-day whirlwind tour of all of the major sights and experiences, including:

the Vatican Museum + Sistine Chapel;

St. Peter’s Basilica + climb to the ‘cupola’ (the pinnacle atop the dome);

Piazza Navona;

the Pantheon;

Piazza di Spagna/Spanish Steps;

Trevi Fountain;

Piazza del Popolo and Via del Corso;

Borghese gardens;

Victor Emmanuel Monument;

Roman Forum;

Colosseum (properly known as the Flavian Amphitheatre, in case you were curious).

In fact, the best question is probably what we didn’t see. We didn’t cross the river and hang out in Trastevere, we didn’t go into the museum at the Villa Borghese, we didn’t rent Vespas…and really that’s about all that we didn’t manage that I have at some point done or wanted to do.

My favorite part was being in the Forum at sunset; I took more pictures in that one hour than I did at any other site we visited, I’m almost sure of it. There’s something beautiful about Rome at sunset, but the Forum at sunset in mid-October was totally breathtaking; I’ve never seen anything like it, in Italy or elsewhere (though Florence, near the Arno River, during a summer sunset comes to mind). I also really liked climbing to the top of the ‘Vittoriano,’ as the Victor Emmanuel Monument is called in Italian, and seeing the city from there, something my family and I had never done. The days were long, and there was a lot of walking, but I had a fantastic time — mostly because I’m slowly becoming more and more familiar with the city and its culture. I’m even getting confident enough in basic Italian to ask for directions, order a meal, and always say my pleases and thank-yous (not to mention read street signs and purchase train and metro tickets). Actually, it wasn’t until after I’d gone through the whole process in Italian that I realized the self-service metro ticket machines could be made to display their instructions in English.

This upcoming weekend will be spent reading Nicholas Nickleby and writing the first essay of the semester (a close textual analysis of a passage from Jane Eyre) because the weekend after that, I will be making my first ever trip to Paris! Then I have one more week of instruction before I get a whole week off for ‘Reading Week,’ in which technically you’re supposed to study and catch up with reading, but when I and my friends will be spending two and a half days in Barcelona followed by three and a half days in Marrakesh. I’m really excited to be doing so much traveling and experiencing so many different places while I’m here, but I’m equally excited to be able to call London ‘home.’

I had a few hours of crazy stress yesterday because the way that you turn in assignments here is so different, and teachers in general seem less concerned about reminding you when your assignments are due. In this case, I was pretty sure that an assignment for my Dickens class was due today by 4:30pm, but when I logged onto the VLE (think blackboard or bspace) it said that it was due yesterday (today at the time) by 4:30pm. It was 1pm when I read this and I had class starting at 3 that I couldn't miss. I ran around finishing up my assignment (thank god it was mostly done already) and then filling out the requisite coversheets (both in print and online) and submitting both a virtual copy via the VLE and a hard copy in person to the English Department office. This makes me miss Berkeley.

Also, my Representing London: the Eighteenth Century class was talking about coffeehouses today and the different kinds of sociability one finds there, and it made me miss my favorite cafe in Berkeley. Oh, Milano, how I pine for thee. There's good coffee here but the pub is the social locale du jour, so I'm stuck with convenient but uninspiring cafes. Still, I can't complain, because they're in London. Every so often I'll be doing something — whether it be reading Jane Eyre, or listening to a Beatles song, or just walking outside and breathing in the beautiful grass-and-wet-cement smell of early mornings post-rain — and then I'll realize that I'm not just reading this novel, or listening to this music, or capturing this moment. I'm doing it in a place that made it, in a sense. London is the genesis of so many things that are important to me. Maybe that's why coming here feels in its own way less like going away and more like coming home.
readingredhead: (Talk)
It was great to be back in Berkeley, and terrible at the same time, because after five days I had to leave. I love the city, and I find out new things about it every time I visit (for example, this time I made my first visit to gourmet ice cream parlor Ici). It'll be good to leave it for a year -- but I have a feeling it'll be just as good to return.

*

The seventeenth gets closer and closer each day. It's almost officially September. That's crazy...but also good. I'm starting to prepare for London in earnest. It's so weird because it's like being a freshman all over again, but with the benefit of hindsight upon the whole college freshman experience. I think I'm going to like 'freshman' year 2.0 even better than I liked the first iteration.

*

Dinner tonight was definitely cinnamon pecan waffles with peanut butter and syrup and milk and bacon. Yum. Life rocks.

*

I'm teaching myself Italian (conversationally, using CDs borrowed from a neighbor) and finding it pretty easy. I've always wanted to learn more languages; the whole grad school language requirement thing is just the incentive I need to start picking them up! Frankly, the real list starts with refreshing my Spanish and then learning French, followed by Italian (and then Latin if I'm not dead yet), but I figure there's no harm in learning some conversational Italian even if I can't actually spell most of the words. Apparently I remember more Spanish than I thought -- sometimes when asked how to say a basic phrase in Italian, I can only remember it in Spanish! In my defense, the languages are remarkably similar. If Italian is spoken slowly enough, I can understand two out of three words.

*

While I'm studying abroad, I will be keeping up with this journal, though it's quite possible I'm (finally) going to make it friends-only. I'm also going to be keeping a public blog that will consist pretty much of condensed and edited LJ posts. I'll still post randomness and rants and hopes and fears on here...but the study abroad blog will be kept free of anything I wouldn't want to share with my distant relatives, parents, and former schoolteachers. Still, if you're itching for someone else to follow on tumblr, my journal is When In London.

*

I got my first check in the mail from DemiDec today! Yes, guys, they're legit, and I'm $700 richer -- and that's only the first of four checks that I'm due. Some of them may be for even larger installments (I confess I don't know exactly). Also, aside from making requested revisions on the three projects that haven't been completed yet (which takes little to no time compared to actually producing the content to begin with), I'm no longer working. This gives me ample and abundant free time. I hadn't realized how much I missed that. I'm looking forward to getting in some beach time, some reading time, some writing time, and some general time to relax.
readingredhead: (Default)
I am waiting and ready for it to really be spring, instead of just lulling me into skirts and tank tops and sandals with the sunny day and blossoming cherry-trees outside my window before reminding me with a gust of cold air that I can't say goodbye to sweaters quite yet. I want the feeling of liveliness that comes with the spring--the sunburns I'll undoubtedly fend off, the late nights where it doesn't get dark and the early mornings where the sun on the dew in the grass makes it sparkle. The clear skies and the ocean back home, the sticky heat of Italian cobblestoned streets and the mischievousness of a London summer shower, the feel of rocks stuck between my feet and my sandals--this is what I miss, what I want. To stop wearing jeans and start wearing board shorts, to pack away all the sweaters and umbrellas for next year, to study outside in the sunshine.

(I don't know why I am so excited by the beginning of each new season in its turn, but I'm glad to feel this way, and so I won't complain, except to say that it should go ahead and get warm already!)
readingredhead: (Stranger)
Bella Firenze


The stars on the cobblestones flicker in time
to the music that plays in the
nighttime air, and lulls
a whole city to wake with its mood and its tone,
all flying everywhere amongst
the dimmed lights of life; the stars
play counterpoint to the dark. The street
feels firm underfoot, and old, worn
with time and a thousand other maladies like
weather and pain and history and
life. With such things in them, it’s no wonder that
the very stones seem to speak, saying
Dance, dance! and humming in
quiet to the old and the new
and the now
alike. Come dance upon us, and feel
what all Florentine men and women know:
that the song of the street
is the most beautiful music
of all; that it resounds in the crevices of
the heart and sets them afire with life’s passion. (A passion
so strong that it should be shared,
must be shared,
oh please will you dance here with me?)
Tonight the street music plays for all lovers, whether
new or old, near or far, known or not -- and for those who love
life, learning, wisdom, even those
who simply purely love where
it is needed, the dance is universal,
speaking only the language of
the night -- but a night
of galaxies dancing, and stars
with their silver coats twirling like
the ladies at a ball most grand, a night
where absolutely everything might
happen. (Might even be true love
is found, might be you, night be
now.) What do you say? I say,
the night is fresh, the moon above like an ancient coin, and
the music swells within
the very streets. It’d be a shame to share
a night like this, and not at least attempt
to dance along with it.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Hm...I wrote that last night when I was thinking about my trip to Florence last summer, and remembering how on our last night there, when we were walking back to the hotel after a late dinner out under the stars in the largest piazza, we walked past all of the street musicians playing and something about it made me want to dance.

I was thinking about it last night because not much makes me want to dance; I often joke that I'm too white to dance well, or manage to get out of it in other similar ways. But that night, under the Italian stars, something about the atmosphere inspired me so much that I can remember it even now, more than half a year later, as if I were there. That memory, the strength of it, compelled me to write this. Other than that, I don't know why I wrote it, or what it means, or where parts of it came from, but it's art, and pulling it apart sometimes messes with it, so I won't.
readingredhead: (Default)
Well, I haven't been doing much the past few days. We leave very early Monday morning, so we only have the rest of today and tomorrow left here! It's weird, but in another way it's welcome, because I've been away from my home for whole month. It just sort of feels weird.

Yesterday was my dad's birthday, so we went out to dinner at this neat little outdoor restaurant in Frascati, the town where we're staying. Italian and American meals are very different. Very. My dinner consisted of a bottle of Coca-Cola (as in, an actual glass bottle -- no aluminum can!), a slice of my cousin's cheese pizza, probably a piece or two of bread while I was waiting for food to come, a giant bowl of fettucine with meat sauce, and two chicken legs. Don't forget the three scoops of ice cream for dessert -- chocolate, coffee, and chocolate chip, yum!

Well, that's about it...we haven't done as much this time through, at least it feels like we haven't. Mom says we did more this time, though, and I see what she means by that. Well, I have to go eat lunch now, and I probably will be too busy to post again till I get home. Well, see you then, I guess!

Oh, and thanks to all who commented on my last post with their congratulations! They really made my day! I am so lucky to have awesome supportive friends.
readingredhead: (Default)
I can't believe that I didn't post this earlier, but I'm just now remembering.

Okay, remember how I posted something right before I left about how Julie E. Czerneda was interested in my short stories? Well, I e-mailed her from London the Friday before we left there, detailing a few stories that I was writing/had written, and I basically told her that I tend towards sci-fi and fantasy stories that explore new ideas or develop characters.

Well, she wrote back.

Not only did she write back, she asked me if I wanted to be on her invitation list. As in, the list of people who she invites to write short stories for her anthologies.

So of course I said yes.

She responded and told me, "Feel free to nudge me about the invitation if you don't hear anything by about fall."

(That's an exact quote.)

So I pretty much went crazy. I mean, me -- a published writer? Well, obviously it's my dream, but it's always been something that stays in the far-distant future. Suddenly, but not unwelcomely (if that's a word), it's been moved into the forseeable present.

Heh. So now I'm wondering how I'll take all the AP/IB classes and also write a killer short story...

But I guess that's a good problem to have.
readingredhead: (Default)
So in the rush of being on vacation in an awesome foreign country and doing absolutely nothing for about three weeks straight, I have completely forgotten that AP test results were being mailed to my house.

Me. Completely forget AP.

So now I'm just slightly nervous, and just slightly wishing that I didn't have to wait a whole 10 days before going home...

But it's awesome being here. I miss certain parts of home: my couch, my computer, my cable internet, my couch, my shower, my own room and not one shared with three other teenage girls who are in some way related to me, my couch...

The thing is, I know that once I get home I'll end up doing nothing but work getting ready for school to start again. Sheesh, people aren't supposed to have stressful summers!

I live!

Jul. 15th, 2005 04:12 pm
readingredhead: (Default)
Just a short entry to let all my friends know that yes, I'm still alive.

Venice and Florence were both amazing, though in retrospect I think I liked Venice better this time. It's a bigger city and has more cool shops and restaurants. We did all the tourist things, like feeding pidgeons in San Marco's square, but we also walked a lot. One day we kinda walked in circles, but that was okay -- we weren't short on time.

I shared a hotel room with my cousin Flavia. It wasn't very big but our window opened up over a canal and you could hear people going by in gondolas. We took a ride on a gondola one day as well.

Venice is also really well known for Carnivale, its version of Mardi Gras. So even though Carnivale is in February, there are stores that sell costumes and elaborate masks all year round. Corinne, Carissa, Flavia, and I each bought a mask. Now we really have to have a masquerade party this Halloween, because I want an excuse to wear mine! Deanna, you would have died -- there was this one amazing costume shop that was full of old opera costumes and I wanted to buy the whole store. Amazing velvet capes, gorgeous dresses...a costumer's heaven, but hell also since everything was expensive and impossible for us to bring back home. It was wonderfully terrible.

Um...I think that's about it for Venice. Florence was cool, too; we saw a lot of art, and I mean a lot: in four days we went to three museums. It was awesome seeing all the Renaissance art because I remembered everything from AP Euro. Most amazing of the art I saw would have to be Michelangelo's David. It was truly gigantic, and enormous, and every other word you could think of.

Florence is also known for its leather, and so we bought a lot of leather things. I have two new leather-bound journals...one of which looks like the twin to Azuria, I kid you not. When I get home I'm going to make it into a sort of Azuria scrapbook. (And some people are probably reading this and going, "What the heck is Azuria?")

But I've been taking lots of time on this, and I originally came over to Flavia's house to go in the pool. The rest of my tale will have to remain untold, or at least shortened, seeing as it's 4:15 PM here and I want to get to bed early tonight so I can wake up early and drive into Rome to get a copy of the sixth Harry Potter book in English...
readingredhead: (Default)
Okay, so God very obviously has a reason for everything. In my last post I was whining about wanting to go back to London.

Then I saw the news about the terrorist bombings in London.

My goodness, I was freaked out! I still am freaked out! I guess it's partly God telling me to be careful what I wish for...I just never seem to be able to learn to be content with what I've got.

And Italy's not so bad. Tomorrow we leave for a week -- we're spending four nights in Venice and three in Florence, or maybe the other way around, I don't remember. That should be great; though I've been to Venice before, it'll be my first time in Florence. I really am looking forward to it.

And it's really great being here. It's just different this time, because I see more of what goes on "behind the scenes," so to speak, and get to shoulder my share of stress. Discount my previous rants -- I really am having a good time. And I wish that I could take the entire ice cream store home with me when I leave. Heck, I want to take the whole town of Frascati home with me! I love it because it's a small town, small enough that guys passing by on the streets stop to shake hands with each other and catch up on their lives, but big enough that it's got more than one hotel; small enough that you can find your way around without a map if you're a local, but big enough that I still need to use the map (or a local) to help me get around.

But I have to go shower now -- I've found one that has actual water pressure, and fits my entire body. :) Granted, it's not at the house we're staying in, but my aunt doesn't mind. They seem to get hot water, too.

And thanks for commenting, Deanna! I promise I took pictures in London!
readingredhead: (Default)
Whoo. Okay, so I figure I'm the only one in the world who can come to an awesome foreign country and complain about it. So I'm a pathetic American -- who in America isn't?

Though I suppose I should be slightly nicer to my country...

Not that it matters since it appears that no one's reading this anyway. Oh well, it's a good way for me to get stuff off my chest, and to keep track of what I'm doing on my trip, since I keep forgetting to write stuff down in one of the many journals I've brought. (I have at least three.)

I don't like it, though -- I thought that Italy would be amazing again, like it was when I came three years ago, but stuff must have changed and not informed me of the changes, because right now I'm kind of wishing I could spend the rest of these three weeks back in London. (Though that part of the trip was amazing and you'll never get me to shut up about it.)

But as usual I'm rambling and sounding slightly conceited. So I'll stop now.
readingredhead: (Default)
Wow, Carissa's slang is definitely rubbing off on me. "Own" and "nub" are her words, not mine -- one having a positive connotation, the other a negative one. But enough of made up words...

Italy's still cool. It's neat when we're going places, but when we're just staying "home" it can get a little boring. It's practically impossible to shower. I think that the biggest shower has an area of maybe a square yard. Mabye. (As in, the area of the shower floor is that big.) There are three girls who have to use the downstairs shower, and the warm water lasts maybe five minutes. The upstairs shower has no water pressure, and there's a hole between the wall and the shower door so if you splash in the wrong direction you get the tile all wet.

But enough of my complaining. Today we went to the Vatican museum and into St. Peter's Cathedral. It was cool seeing the Sistine Chapel again, but...

[rant]

Oh my goodness! There were maybe a billion signs saying "no photography, no recording devices at all, don't talk," et cetera, but people were standing in the middle of the Sistine Chapel talking like they were at a football match, and taking photos like a papparazzi! It might be that I've grown older since we last were there, or maybe just that the world has aged in three years, but what I remember about the Sistine Chapel is profound, awed silence at a master work of art that deserved the utmost respect. It was like everyone in there was there alone, and no one talked -- anyone who did would have been shushed. It just felt like something so innately personal and powerful. This was no idle memory; it persisted with power until this year so that I expected the same profundity of experience this time. Sadly, I was wrong.

[/rant]

And I have to go to dinner now, but I wanted to get that off of my chest. Hopefully I'll post some more stuff later.
readingredhead: (Default)

So, I just installed the software allowing me to upload the pictures from my one camera on to the computer, and I thought I'd post a few.  This camera doesn't have many of the pictures since it's not as good as the other one, but it has a few.

Also, this computer's still working on dial-up internet, so it might be a while before I can upload some of the pics.  (I'm actually working on uploading one right now and it's taking forever, which is why I'm rambling on like this...)

Well, while the pictures load, I might as well do something interesting. 

Pictures here )

Italy!!!

Jul. 3rd, 2005 03:24 pm
readingredhead: (Default)
Well, I made it here alive. I'm typing this on my -- well, "relative's" would be the easiest description. It saves a lot of confusion. So as I was saying, I'm typing this in my relative's house in Italy, just outside the town of Frascati. It's a great little villa, and it's in a great place to have a villa.

We got here yesterday and went for a swim, then had dinner. Today we went into town, had amazing ice cream (I've been waiting for more for three years), and shopped a little in the outdoor market there. Tomorrow we're going into Rome, to the Coliseum and the Forum. I promise to try and send e-mails later to people, but it's been kind of busy unpacking, and stuff. See you all later. Well, much later, since I'm not bakc till the 25th...but I'll hear from you before that. Right? :)

Bye everyone...

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