Showing posts with label packing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label packing. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

The First Day + The Morning of the Second

WE HAVE AIR CONDITIONING *This exclamation will make more sense later.

Cincinnati to JFK wasn’t a bad flight but I have to say Cinci really needs to add more outlets and possibly free wi-fi to really have my vote for favorite airport. I got a grilled cheese (yeah, I know) at a deli in JFK and waited in the Starbucks line for a frappacino, which was delicious. The frappacino was also nice because the airport was warm and I had planned for the overly-air conditioned environment I experienced at O’Hare last year.

Note to self: when you have a headache before getting on a transatlantic flight, find Tylenol before boarding.

Other than the headache which was exacerbated by me pulling my bag from the overhead bin straight onto my face, the flight went well. I met up with Bobby and Kellie Kenis, a couple who will be teaching in the Southwest part of Hungary, at the gate at JFK and they were only sitting a few rows behind me.  The in-flight entertainment was excellent. The movies were Unstoppable and Morning Glory, both of which I had been meaning to watch and both of which I enjoyed. We also got episodes of several NBC shows including Community which I think I might look into watching more of. (Why yes, I did just end a sentence with a preposition, don’t be a prescriptivist.)

Baggage claim is always the most stressful part of flying in my humble opinion. We had been warned our luggage might get lost, so every time it wasn’t my bag coming out on the carousel I had a mini-moment of panic even though I had packed my carry-on knowing it might be my only bag for a few days. All of our (Bobbie, Kellie and I’s) luggage got to Budapest and we met up with Mary and Hajni, and then got on a shuttle-bus thing to the hostel.


Three of the CETP teachers who have been teaching for a few years Emily, Franny and Jon, were at the hostel to meet us and get our remaining paperwork sorted. I was originally going to use the unlocked iPhone I had with the Hungarian SIM but I realized it’d be easier to just have the phone the program got for us and use my iPhone on wireless or get a data only plan for it.

My new phone
 My phone number is +36308203921 by the way and incoming calls are free so call me! Once paperwork and phones got sorted we went to our rooms.  I had a little hiccup with the hostel room a/c, as in it wasn’t working. The maintenance man came and fiddled around and then tried to explain in Hungarian what was wrong but all I recognized was the word ‘kaput’ so I had to go downstairs and get one of the program people to translate. Basically, the A/C was burnt out and couldn’t be fixed until the next day, not fun when the weather is in the mid 90s and the humidity is similar to the Georgian summers from my childhood (It ended up not being terrible that evening  and  I went to sleep easily)

More teachers from the program arrived while I was dealing with the A/C and finally showering away the plane stench, including one of my hostel roommates Kristen. She is going to be teaching in Kuseg which is on the Austrian border, so we’ve already made plans to make plans to visit Vienna, the beaches in Croatia and possibly some places in Spain and Italy during the year.

Bobby, Kellie, Dianna, Sue, Kristen and I decided to venture out mid-afternoon to get food and see the city. We ate at a place with gyros that were delicious once we fumbled through ordering in a mixture of English and reading the Hungarian names. Thank goodness the menu had pictures! The gyro had cabbage and a spicy sauce on it, two things I hadn’t had on a gyro before but it was amazing. Part of my excitement may have been related to the fact I hadn’t eaten much in the last 12 hours, but it was an excellent gyro nonetheless.

After we got food we headed down the main street and towards the river. We said goodbye to Sue who was planning a trip to Ikea, and ended up hiking (there was a paved path which we mostly followed and stairs but it still felt like hiking on little sleep and not an insignificant amount of dehydration) up to the citadel at the top of this hill. 
The Citadel

There were frequent stops to take pictures and/or breathers on the way up but we made it to the top! The breeze at the top was almost as welcome as the gorgeous view of the city, they might actually have been tied.

 I bought a giant bottle of water at the top of the mountain for 500 ft. This picture was actually a little around and down from the top where there was a restaurant and a mini shop.




Giant bottle of water!
I had to take a picture of this sign to commemorate the memory of the first time I paid to use a restroom/water closet in Europe.

Later that day, my sense of time is so messed up I’m not really sure when it was, we (the group from before) and some of the new arrivals went to a restaurant down the hill from the hostel. Natalie, Lindsey(I’m not sure how she spells this) and I shared a bottle of rosé and I got gnocchi with chicken in a red sauce.

Yum

The food was again delicious and I was extremely full afterwards. I stayed awake long enough to go back to the computer lab and check the responses to my “I’m alive” email/facebook statuses. After that was done I went and crashed in our (oh so very hot) room.


I woke up at 6am but I fell back asleep until my alarm went off at 7am. It was only set that early because that was when the maintenance man was supposed to come, he didn’t show up until 11:30ish. I was pretty awake though so I stayed up and bummed around for a bit until Kristen and I decided to go to the market across the river. We got there fine, but it was a bit overwhelming as we were exhausted. Columbus people think North Market except larger, with some little touristy stalls and everyone is speaking Hungarian.

Jet lag and sore muscles from the day before meant we went to a café by the market to eat instead of trying to buy food from the vendors. It was a pretty good breakfast and the coffee was excellent!

Kristen and I decided to head back and stick around the hostel for a while to recharge and write our blog posts.  We got a mini lesson in Hungarian cards (they have different suits etc) and played a short game called Ulti which is like hearts, with the teachers who checked us in yesterday.

Now, I am all caught up and hoping that I can get this from Word on my Mac to my blog without screwing all the formatting etc up.



Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Almost Ready

I have finally managed to get my bags packed and under the weight limit, let me just say Tetris was never my strong suit! Two large suitcases, a carry on, and then my backpack are what is coming with me to Hungary and I still have so much more to pack for my parents to keep for me. Life would be a lot easier without $150 charges for over weight bags, but as I always whine about filling up my 13 gallon tank, I can't imagine how people cringe when thinking of the fuel it takes to fly across the Atlantic.

I'm definitely going to have to work on getting back into the swing of writing, my Power of the Pen skills are a little rusty. Until then, these posts are going to be a bit underwhelming so cut me some slack for now.

Anywho, I am very ready to head out but the goodbye dinners with friends kind of suck, knowing I won't see them for a year or more, not counting Skype dates. Speaking of Skype I really need to get a good handle on how much data Skype calls use, especially video chats because Internet in Hungary is paid for by megabytes of usage. So all you Americans who pay a basic monthly fee for unlimited internet should be thankful :P Oh and my Skype name is atate43 fyi.

Ta for now the 0 readers I have because I've yet to give people the URL for this.

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Starting Out

So I don't officially leave for Hungary until August 21st (at 12:15pm, well I leave JFK at 6:45pm but that's just getting nitpicky) but I figured I'd get this set up now seeing as how internet may be a bit spotty in the beginning over there.

Anyway, not that I expect anyone who doesn't know me to be reading this but just in case here's a little background into how in the world I got a job in Central Europe.

I was a student at Ohio State University when I happened upon a linguistics course and thought what the heck!? In the middle of a transition from pre-med classes to anything-but-pre-med-classes I was a little lost but having always loved languages I figured I couldn't go wrong with a few ling classes. One class in I was hooked, ecstatic to have a major again and one that I loved I rode that high for a bit before realizing I had no idea what to do with a degree in linguistics. After some googling, reading and frantic talks with kids in my classes I decided teaching English abroad seemed like an amazing idea. I hadn't got the chance to travel as much as I'd have liked so combining a job with new countries was a tantalizing combination.

Thanks to the resources in the Career Services Office where I volunteered, both books and the brilliant director Dr. Ford, I managed to find the Central European Teaching Program. The website was helpful and Dr. Ford knew a former PCA'r who had worked with the program so I figured it was legitimate and sent an email asking for some information.

I have to say I was very impressed with both the quality and the quickness of the responses I got to my query emails. That gave me the confidence to apply in January and I appreciated their patience with my seemingly constant questions. Fast forward a handful of months and I got confirmation that I would have a place in Mezőtúr, Hungary. <- (That weird formatting is because I still can't figure out how to do the double accent above a vowel so a quick cmd + c/v is needed)

Knowing I had a job in the fall made it both easier and harder to get through the last few weeks of school. I could relax when many of my friends were scrambling to find post-graduation options but motivation to finish tedious classwork was in short supply when all I needed was that diploma in my hand to go teach.

I managed to buckle down and now I have that diploma as well as flight confirmations, a luggage set and a giant list of things I need to figure out how to cram into two suitcases, a carry-on and a personal item come August. I know more trips to the Container Store are in my future as well as several serious cleaning and organizing fits, but time is getting short and I couldn't be happier.

So that's how I got to this point and as anyone who knows me can attest to, I am beyond ready to go which leads to things like my premature blogging :D