Monday, November 26, 2007

On the first day of...

SNOW! YES, SNOW! I LIVE SOMEWHERE WITH SNOW!! Isn't that exciting?!?! There we were, sitting in German class, when the teacher looks out the window and says, oh, it's snowing. What?!? Celeste and I (my fellow desert dweller, shivering here in the frozen north) ask for permission then run outside. SNOW! It was too warm for it to stay on the ground, but it was coming down pretty thick, and it was beautiful! Sadly, I didn't have my camera dabei any of the times it snowed, because I was either in class or driving. But still! It snowed! And I have high hopes for more! I'm dreaming of a white Christmas....

Then, today was full. We made cookies! Watching four kids (Lena was over) and trying to bake cookies and clean up all at the same time is a handful. And tomorrow I get the kids all alone, all day long. Eek! A true test of my abilities. But yes, the first cookies of the season! Woo-hoo!! I love this time of year!!!!!

Sunday, November 25, 2007

Tiffany's Trip

Well, this was a fun weekend. Tiffany Pritchard took a weekend out of her semester abroad in England to come visit. Now, this is especially interesting when you realize the fact that we've technically never met before...but don't worry, neither of us are totally random strangers. She went to NCS, too, for a bit, and we had a great many of the same friends there, so we've talked before and heard stories on one another. The thing is, when you're over here, if anyone you know - or sort of know - is on the same continent, you just have to get together. You can't let something like that pass you by!

She flew in Thursday night and I picked her up, and Friday morning we set out at a nice dark 7 am for Munich. The drive is about 8 hours, and since it was the day after Thanksgiving - despite Thanksgiving not existing in Germany - we listened to Christmas music the whole way there. Our goal was Dachau, one of the largest concentration camps, which still stands as a memorial today. We got in about 4:30, meaning it was already dark, and there was still some snow laying on the roofs and the gravel was icy. The first time I ever visited a concentration camp was 7 years ago when PCC went to Mathausen in Austria. I'll never forget the experience, but I think this one was even more impacting. Perhaps it's just because we were in Mathausen on a sunny summer's day, and here in Dachau we visited in the dark, the bitingly cold and windy and wet late fall. Walking across the roll call area between the main building and the barracks, it really made me think a lot more about what life there might actually have been like. You can go into one of the two remaining barracks and see where the prisoners lived, and I can't imagine how awful, and how cold, it must have been. The walls and floors are bare wood, the beds three on top of eachother, no space in between - at one point a room that was supposed to house 60 men held about 400, crammed into these beds. There's a museum in the old kitchen/office building at the camp, across the parade ground from the barracks. We didn't have enough time Friday night to look through all of it, because the memorial closes at 5, so we came back Saturday morning to get another chance to go through. There's so much information, so much horror and pain and tragedy. There was a Nazi demonstration in Vechta last weekend, and it makes me wonder, after seeing things like this, how can people possibly want to go back to that? I know it's just a select, sick few who venerate the Nazi way of life, but how can someone even think of doing this to another human? It makes me ill.
So, the rest of the trip was fun. We stayed overnight in Munich in a hostel, a first for both of us. Happily, none of the horror stories we've all heard were true for us. The hostel was clean and safe and pleasant. There were four other girls in our room, two of whom were British and we spoke to for about a minute before going to bed, two others we only saw as shapes in dark beds as we left early the next morning. After our second forray into Dachau, we went to downtown Munich for souvenirs and the like. In the process, I encounted the most annoying parking experience EVER. We waited in line to get into the parking garage for a good 40 minutes. Yes. Really. It - and the others - were so full that you had to wait at the ticket machine until someone left, then go hunt down their old parking spot. Ha. I had to try and park at AZ Mills on Black Friday last year. Europe, not having Thanksgiving, must do everything the Saturday after, because this was i.n.s.a.n.e. Parking at the mall would have been a breeze compared to this.

We walked around the festive and decorative downtown Munich for a couple hours, enjoying the Christmas-specialty smells and fighting the crowds. The only time I've seen anything here this crowded is the day we went to Heidelberg. Lots and lots and lots and lots of people! But it was fun nonetheless. Then, sadness, it was time to go home. Back in the car with the Christmas music! We had no traffic on the autobahns the whole weekend, but getting out of Munchen was gridlock for a looong time. Then there was the adventure of trying to find food and not being able to, of Jane not sticking to the windshield because she was cold, and of adventuring trying to find our way home because the autobahn (#33) was closed and we had to try and find our way in the dark because Jane was insistent on taking it. Whee. Fun times.

Up again this morning to beautiful sunshine and blue skies! It has since changed and is drearily gray and cold and rainy out, but on our way to the airport it was lovely. Tiffany is now back in England, and going home in 2 weeks! Wow. Part of me almost wishes I was here for a semester thing like that, but everyone says the last 6 months go by SO fast, so here's hoping!

Thursday, November 22, 2007

Happy Thanksgiving!

Thanksgiving is my fourth favorite holiday, unless you count Christmas Eve and Christmas as one, in which case it becomes my third favorite holiday. I love sleeping in a little, sitting in my pajamas and watching the Macy's parade, seeing the sun streaming through the windows in that way it only does on holidays. I love the festive feeling that makes me smiley, and wish that the parade would drag on a little longer before I have to start cleaning and cooking. I love having the whole family over and eating - even though I'm really not fond of turkey - and eating and eating some more, and then starting on the dessert (mmmmm pie!). I love decorating the house in fall colors and turkeys and leaves and pumpkins, which somehow we never seem to remember to do until Thanksgiving morning, and it all gets cleared away the next day for all the CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS!!!

This year, things are different, although I am very thankful that God sent me that special holiday sunshine here in the sun-forgotten land of Germany. Imagine - seeing the blue sky! What a treat! And not freezing without three layers of long sleeves on! Incredible! And I still got to do some cleaning because Tiffany's coming tonight, so it sort of does feel like Thanksgiving. I'll scrounge on youtube and find some old Macy's clips to complete my day. :) No pumpkin pie, though.

So, some things I'm thankful for.

♥ My family!! Who knew I'd ever miss them so much?
♥ My friends, who keep me sane.
♥ all the people - YOU - at home, who are praying for me
♥ The chance to live in another country - and the fact that it's halfway done!
♥ the hope I have, all because of what God has done for me
♥ the sunshine
♥ all the little ways God blesses me and sends smiles into my days

Then there are future thanks:
♥ getting away for the weekend
♥ getting to see Larissa next month!!
♥ getting to listen to CHRISTMAS MUSIC tomorrow!!!!

Monday, November 19, 2007

Another Day

Today is rather how I thought life here would be - a very typical aupair day. Wake up to a smile, take people to school, go to German class, come home, do homework, eat lunch, grab a nap before spending the afternoon playing fetch and being a stoplight for racing traktors and pushing swings, seeing the most colorful sunset here to date (this picture is at 4:15 pm) then coming in (to a nice warm fire after FREEZING outside) and playing after setting the table, picking up, eating dinner, helping get kids to bed, and spending a lovely evening reading by the fire and listening to the German "Who Wants to be a Millionaire," before coming upstairs to call my bestie on her birthday, finishing travel plans, and settling down for one more chapter of HP7 (third time in as many months, I know, I know) with my cup of Kamille tea and a couple cookies before bed. Just a good day.

Saturday, November 17, 2007

Eek!

So, due to some random whim of the internet, my blog seems to have been deleted, but here I am re-instated on the same site, so we'll just continue from here. After all, it's a new leaf to go with the fact that -

I've been here 6 months!!!!

Can you believe it?!?!? I can't hardly believe it! From now on, every day that I am here means that I have been here longer than I have until I go home. Counting down and not up. Half-way!! Not that I'm so terribly anxious to leave already, but it's a huge thing. Think: I have been living in Germany, in Europe, for half a year! Half-way! What a concept.

Oh, and its amazing how much of a lift one can get from talking with one's best friend for the first time in 4 months. :)

Anyways, if you could all continue to keep me in your prayers, it'd be much appreciated. What with holidays approaching, the homesickness is creeping in! Eek. And pray that Tiffany and I have a safe trip next weekend, that everything goes well!
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