Epilogue

After four months, I’m back home. It feels so comforting to be back in my old room, to be with my family, and to have a few weeks of unproductive mindless downtime before going back to school. I expected to feel very sad after leaving Prague, and I do miss my friends from UNYP, but I am mostly happy to be home. The glow of all my happy memories from…

Preparing for re-entry

This will most likely be the second-to-last post I write for this blog! To finish WWU’s travel writing program, I will write this post about “preparing for re-entry into the US,” and then I’ll make a “post-program reflections” post when I’m back home. It’s bizarre to realize that I’m leaving Prague so soon; after four months of experiences, five days doesn’t seem long enough to say all of my goodbyes.…

Logistical tips for studying abroad

This post had to come eventually! It will be fairly boring to anyone who isn’t planning an upcoming study abroad trip, so please don’t feel obligated to read this if you’re just following along with my pictures and updates about my trip. The following post will include various practical things I’ve learned about traveling to a new country, including language learning, cell service/technology, packing, and shopping. My very first post…

Winter in Prague, a story told through photos

From snow-covered statues, to foggy mornings, to Christmas markets, Prague in the winter feels like a fantasy land. Equal parts cozy and formidable, the city captures the duality of the season. Sometimes I feel like a child, looking at Christmas lights and catching snow on my mittens, but sometimes I feel like a traveler wandering through a forbidding and ancient realm of eternal winter. In this post, I’ll be showing…

I’m not sure how to like my peers: a reflection on UNYP’s academic culture

For those of you who I’ve talked to about my classes, you’ll know the contents of this post have been brewing in my mind for a while—nearly the whole semester. One might question my decision to write about school culture and values disputes in this travel blog, but I’m including it because 1) it’s been a meaningful part of my study abroad experience, and 2) future study abroad students may…

Two weekends of travel: Dublin and Vienna

I apologize for lumping these two visits together into one post, but I have several other topics I’d like to write about in this blog in the next few weeks, so I didn’t feel like last month’s trips needed two separate posts. In addition, the Dublin and Vienna trips were during two consecutive weekends, so in my head, they’re sort of the same event. (that’s what I’m telling myself). Dublin…

The blur of the middle

I’m now exactly two months into my study-abroad trip. Because I leave in around a month and a half, that means I’m over halfway done with my time in Prague. I was very surprised by this two-month anniversary; after the one-month mark, I’d apparently continued to think I’d been here for “one month” for several weeks after. The rest of this entry will explore how I’ve conceptualized time passing as…

Mid Program: “A day in the life”

It’s hard to convey an “average” day in the life of a study abroad student. Every day looks different, since we’re all trying to be tourists and go on adventures amidst the stable schedule of classes. In this post, I will nevertheless try to describe what is closest to average for me. Accordingly, I’ve tried to pick out my most ordinary pictures for this entry (instead of showing off all…

A weekend in Budapest: featuring a million pictures of the Danube, poignant history, and too many clubs for my liking

My five roommates and I, plus four other friends from UNYP, joined a student tour to Hungary this weekend. Since Budapest was one of my most highly anticipated trips out of Prague, I was excited to see it, but knew so little about the city that I had almost no expectations. I think that’s a lucky combination of attitudes because I went into the trip ready to be pleased but…

A day trip to Kutná Hora: featuring gothic beauty, human bones, and many cats

On Sunday, we woke to the first fall chill of the season. It was as if the wind knew we were going to the perfect autumn destination: Kutná Hora, a town perched on a hill, crowned by an imposing gothic cathedral, and best known for an ossuary decorated with bones. Kutná Hora is a town of around 20,000 people located an hour’s train ride east of Prague. It originally rose…