Thursday, December 30

South Tour Pictures Part One (Golkunda Fort, Hydrabad)








My friend, Nisha Khan, and I.  Nisha is from Onterio, Canada. This is the only picture not from my camera, our friend, Amanda, took this. One of the other students (Franzi from Germany) made a CD with a mix of the best of everyone's pictures from the whole tour and gave them to us for Christmas so now I have around 3,000 pictures from the tour alone.
The whole group plus random Indians in the background. That's one of the problems with being a foreigner here, everyone tries to get in your pictures and EVERYONE wants a picture of you. Sometimes people ask but most of the time, they try to be sneaky and try to get a picture without you noticing. This gets VERY old after awhile.

First row, left to right: Dascha (Oregon, born in Russia), Nisha (Onterio, Canada)
Second row, left to right: Sebastian (Colombia), Hannah (Germany), Me, Franzi (Germany), Aafreen (India), Serenity (Florida, born in Korea), Olivia (Michigan)
Back row, left to right: Chris Yoder (Illinois), Amanda (Washington state), Nikolas (Germany), Jordan (Oregon), Sabrina (Austria), Jakob (Germany), Brii (Onterio), Anais (France), Michelle (Germany)

Wednesday, December 29

Merry Christmas (Exchange Student Style)

I just returned this morning from a week in Nagpur where most of the other exchange students on the South Tour were from. We arrived the 23rd and spent that day and the next learning a practicing dances for their district conference. Because we only had 2 days to learn, the students from my district only did one dance. It was a Bengali traditional folk dance. Christmas eve we went to a Christmas party at a country club as the guests of one of the student's parents. From there we attended a midnight mass at a nearby church which was a really special and emotional thing for a lot of people. That night, we slept at the house of their counselor and stayed up late discussing our various Christmas traditions. This may have been my favorite part of the night because for me that's what a big part of being an exchange student is about, sharing cultures. On Christmas day, after a quick change we met once again to go to the conference an hour outside of the city. On the bus ride over we exchanged secret santa gifts that we had drawn at the end out the tour. All the gifts were placed under a little "christmas tree" potted plant that we brought on the bus. Some people also brought small things for the whole group like sweets, CDs of photos from the tour, or, I brought a collection of silly bands...
The rest of the day was spent hanging out and preparing for that night's performance. Some of the dances that the other students did were amazing. The exchange student show is an annual favorite at the function I guess and it's often said that the foreigners know the dances better than some Indians.
Below is a link to one of 3 newspaper articles about us and out practices. There were also 2 news television broadcasts.

http://www.ehitavada.com/site.home/paper_type/13/date/2010-12-25/page_no/8

The 26th, we also returned to the conference. The rest of our time was spent just hanging out. I had a great trip and everything but it was also nice to return home today to my family and everything.

In some ways Christmas wasn't as hard, missing home-wise, but in other ways it was harder. I didn't expect to have any kind of christmas and as long as I didn't think about home and our traditions, which I didn't really, it was fine. However, when several of your close friends are missing home, it's easy to follow suit and think about what you're missing. But when I stopped to reflect on the fun I was having, the people I was with, were I was, and everything it all amounted to much more positive feelings than I could have possibly had negative. I hope that made sense.

I still promise for South Tour pictures but it's time for me to go to bed,

Tuesday, December 14

Another Family

Blogging has not been on my mind in the past few days.
 As soon as I returned from the tour I had to switch gears and unpack everything just to repack it again. This time though, I had to pack EVERYTHING since I switched families on Sunday. It seems like all my stuff has multiplied since the last time I moved.
My new host family is not far from the previous one. They live in a relatively unpolluted and diverse colony ( I was told many times that people of all religions and castes live together and get along). There are also a fair number of animals who come because there is a very small wooded area. This morning when I was walking to the bus there was a flock of wild peacocks in the road. That's another great thing about my new location, the junior section for my school is at the end of the road and all the buses start and finish their rounds here. I don't have to leave until 8 in the morning when one of the buses returns to drop off kids for the junior school.
My new family consists of my mother and father who are both doctors and my 20 year old host sister. We live on the third floor of the apartment building in a two-bedroom flat. My host aunt, uncle, and cousin who's 15 live below us. I think the family owns the whole building. Everyone is very nice, VERY nice. When I first arrived my cousin and I spent a couple hours walking around and I met some of the other girls (mostly younger) and people who live in the colony.
I'm sure I'll think of more to say later but for now I have homework and other things I need to do. I also promise to put pictures from the tour up as soon as possible but there is no wireless internet here so I have to transfer them from my laptop to my sister's.

Saturday, December 11

Home Again...

I returned to Indore on Friday morning while it might be great to be back and living a regular routine I miss being on tour very much. I had an AMAZING time, that's an understatement but I don't know how else to put it (hope the caps lock helped).
There were 18 students, mostly from Germany or Canada and the US. From start to finish, the trip went far to quickly. We started in Nagpur where a lot of the students are living and took a night bus ride from there. Most other nights were spent at hotel except for a few that we spent rocking on the bunks of trains.
 From the get go, we were busy every day visiting dozens of temples and other sights and monuments. We spent a few days simply relaxing on beaches or strolling through markets bargaining for souvenirs and gifts. Mostly though, it was a wake up at 7 and non-stop doing things until dinner time even is those things were sitting on a bus for a few hours watching India roll by.
ONe of my favorite days came towards the end of the middle of the trip (if that makes sense). We started the day in warm and balmy Mysore but by the end of the day our bus had climbed thousands of feet into the mountains in a hill station city call Ooty. The drive was breathtaking in a way I had never experienced before. We drove high above the valley we had come from winding on dangerous switchbacks, a sign at each hairpin bend reminding drivers how many people had died there previous years. The scenes were stunning though, lush, unbroken green of the wildlife preserve spread out in the valley below. Trees and bushes clung to the rocked mountain side and above us craggy peaks soared into the clouds. The vegetation at the bottom could only have been described as tropical but at we ascended, it began to resemble the forests at home or in the Pacific Northwest. Both the small villages we passed and the city of Ooty itself were much like what I expect to find if I ever make it to the small mountainside villages in South America. Terraces covered the hills growing the areas produce as well as thousands of pounds of tea to be exported.
 The hotel we stayed in had a magnificent view of the town below, it was built terraced into the side of the mountain with the wall facing out made all out of glass. The whole time we were there a cloud layer surrounded the mountains and valleys making us feel like we were in our own world up there that we had driven to.
Another of my favorite places we stayed was Goa, though it was a favorite for a whole different set or reasons. Goa is THE vacation destination to go to in India, it's a major beach town. We got to spend long relaxing hours on the beaches. Another night we spent in a houseboat in the backwaters of Allappy where we passed single homes on lone islands and Indians rowing by in small homemade canoes. It was another extremely relaxing night, we listened to music, danced, swam, and watched one of the best sunsets ever!
I wish I could go on to describe every temple, every beach, every moment of tour but that would be beyond my and the computers capabilities. I plan on posting pictures as soon as I can but if you're my friend on facebook you can see both my pictures and the hundreds that my friends have posted.