Tuesday, January 1, 2008

Jan 3-4, 2008, Whatdya think?


http://www.rabbies.com/loch_ness_inverness_highland_2_day_itinerary.asp

I gotta get the heck out of dodge, AKA South Shields, UK...so...I thought I'd go on a little Jessica-esque tour of a freakin' LIFETIME!
After two days on this trip, I'm quite certain I will walk off the bus feeling either motion sick or enriched...or maybe both :)
It's a shame that I won't get to "really" visit Edinburgh (well maybe for an hour)...but regardless! This trip sounds AMAZING!

Whatdya think?
Oh and HAPPY NEW YEAR my loved ones :)

Monday, December 24, 2007

Happy Holidays!

Hello everyone! I want to begin by wishing all of you a very happy holiday season. Here in Lyon, the holiday season, beginning with Thanksgiving, has gone by very quickly, which in some ways is good: 1)I am not thinking about how much I miss home during this time (which in truth-I still do), and 2) after Christmas I go on vacation! A real vacation!
My friend Cody from Cabot HS is coming to France to study for a semester in Orléans. Before he goes to study, he’s coming to Lyon, and then we are flying to London! We’ll leave London immediately for South Shields on the North Sea, near Newcastle, where we will stay until Jan. 2cd, and then we’ll go to Edinburgh until Jan. 5th and then for Jan 5th and 6th we’ll be in London again. England and Scotland baby!! That’s a “real” vacation! I hope to see a lot of scenery…learn a lot of history…you know all the stuff the Romantics cried over in the 1800’s : )

As for Christmas, I’m going over to Marie-José’s place (my host counselor) for Christmas Eve. I’m thinking the tradition is different. I’ll be sure to jot down a little bit about their French family Christmas though, and after I get back from Great Britain I’ll write a "little" post about my Christmas and about my trip.

I actually just got back from Strasbourg. Yes. Again. This time Nathan insisted that I come up to see what Alsace is very known for---their Christmas markets! It was a great time! Well that is, it was a great time despite the frostbite/slick icy spots (mostly frozen dog pee)/twisted ankle. Yeah, that’s right. Nathan had never had a snowball thrown at him, so when I went to do it, the earth opened up and tried to eat me via a big hole in the concrete. It got a little twist of my ankle, but nothing that really slowed me down. Crazy Cajun though; he shoulda had a snow-ball thrown at him before ; ) We also went to another Alsatian town called Colmar, which is known just as well known for its Christmas markets and also for being “la petite Venise” of France, “the little Venice”. We hobbled around the city with my gimp leg for a great afternoon, a little too icicled, but a beautiful day nonetheless.
A few weeks back Nathan came down to Lyon to see an event special to Lyon: “La Fête des Lumières”=The Festival of Lights. For four nights Lyon was lit up until 1AM! I mean everywhere you looked, all you could see was one light show after another. I won’t write in great detail about every little thing because honestly, you just have to go look at my photos. Just about every square and/or parc in the city had a light show, which were always different in some way. For example, on some exhibits lights would bounce off of walls, on others, pictures were projected on buildings, or another, for example in Place des Terreaux, we saw a giant rainbow-colored sphere that reflected light off of surrounding buildings, and it also had lights pointing up to the sky, crossing in the middle. During this particular show, a sound machine made eerie extra-terrestrial noises. It was pretty amazing! I made Nathan close his eyes and let me guide him though a lot of it because he (and I!) had never seen anything like that! It was worth the surprise…he didn’t seem to mind too much.
Also, for this same event my previous Facebook-only friend Aurélien, a Frenchie who had met my good friend Anna-Kate while she was in France on her Rotary Scholarship, contacted me asking if he could stay at my place on Saturday night during la Fête, and he was going to bring along a friend named Monica (from Maine) who he had just met—through Anna-Kate. So both of them show up on Saturday for the “grand spectacle” on December 8th. Nathan, Aurélien, Monica, and I all ventured out into the city, a city full of an expected 2 million people just on Saturday alone. It was C-R-A-Z-Y! We literally couldn’t move at all in the crowds unless someone pushed us from behind! Should to shoulder with a whole city, we had a GREAT time! …seeing light shows, drinking vin chaud, watching strikes (yes even during the fête there were strikes!), eating bison burgers and hot roasted nuts, and taking many goofy pics-and all the while we got to know each other better. Monica and I realized that we had already met, and actually at Anna-Kate’s apartment in Little Rock! Both worked for Heifer International down at the Perryville Ranch, and that is how they know each other. Small world. So thanks Anna-Kate, and thanks to Rotary as Aurélien said! Otherwise he would have never met Anna-Kate, Monica, Nathan, or me, the four crazy Americans!
So, about those grèves…school finally started back up again after 4 weeks of not having class. We missed a lot to say the least! I kept busy though while I was away, busy with everything Rotaract. I am very fortunate to have a very welcoming Rotaract club here, and one who does acts of services ; ) A few weeks ago we all got together and made 50 Christmas wreathes, which we sold and bought francophone books with the 500 Euros, and then we donated the books to a library in Argentina (don’t ask me why Argentina, seems kind of bizarre-I know). That was incredibly fun, and I enjoyed very much getting to be crafty : ) Also, we got together for our Christmas dinner. We went to this beautiful restaurant with cave-like walls lit up by these enormous sconces mounted by cables from the ceiling. We played that under 5 Euros Christmas present exchange game; me, I got a Japanese zen garden! It’s a little mock-up zen garden sort of like a miniature sand-box with pebbles and a rake. Gotta keep it well groomed! After dinner, I can say now that I can talk more easily with the Rotaractors. A week later we went to an old folks home where we sang French Christmas songs for the elderly who stay there. We also played “le loto” AKA BINGO. We served them some cake and juice, and we gave them gifts. I sat with a 90 year old man named Salvador. Originally from Italy, he explained to me his sad story of how hard it is for him to get around to see his family for Christmas and that he will stay at the nursing home with his buddies. After I fed him cake and helped him drink his OJ, we opened up his gift (well, I did), and then I put the bow on his sweater! Then after we sang, he yelled me back over to him, he took both my hands, and told me thank you for making his Christmas better. Nearly in tears, I Frenchie-cheek-kissed him and then for about 4 minutes while I was putting my coat on and getting ready to leave, he waived at me from his seat! It was pretty tender ; ) It was a very nice experience for me, and at first before I went, I was afraid that I wouldn’t be able to understand the older French people talking to me (because sometimes in English I can barely understand them back home!), but truly it doesn’t matter. You don’t even have to say a word. It’s just good enough to sit with them and let them recall memories of old, days long past that are often happy times and sadly often very difficult times. Auld Lang Syne. But I realize that although it can be hard to sit through some of their sad stories, these older people are happy to share them with you. I truly believe that the elderly can teach us so much about ourselves, who we’ve been and who we'll become.

Also while I was away from school, I was writing my first Rotary report which I finally got turned in. It only had to be 2 pages long, but it ended up being 6.5! I have attached the documents for you to read-one in English, one in French. Consider it a Christmas gift! Haha; ) I had to write one in both languages. My friend who I met through Rotaract, Marion, helped me edit my French. I was pretty pleased that my main problem was wordiness and preposition-verb agreement/wrong-use of preposition. I’m pretty okay with that ; )

Speaking of Marion...she’s awesome. So is her family. They invited me over one day last week to eat and to meet the rest of the family. Her dad’s pretty intimidating, and I’m glad I remembered deodorant that day, but all in all, they rock! Very nice people. They even invited me to go with them in the Spring to their vacation home in Provence. They said we have to wait to go though; they want me to see the rows of lavender in full-bloom ; ) I’m pretty okay with that too...the waiting for beauty; )
I invited Marion over the other day to see my apartment, and to see my make-shift Christmas tree! I went to IKEA, and for 3 Euros I bought some green ribbon, 2 strings of lights, and some gold garland, and I made a tree on my window!! Note: picture of me and my Christmas tree attached.
My parents and Lindsay (bro’s girlfriend) sent me a box full of Christmas gifts, so I put them under my “Christmas Tree”. I’ll probably be tacky like other cool people out there who leave their trees up indefinitely. I actually put it up for Thanksgiving to make myself feel a little better and to snap me out of that “woe-is-me” mindset.
My Thanksgiving isn’t all worth talking about, but the week after is! I invited all my friends over, all the Asians, and Guillaume, the French/Japanese major, and I cooked spaghetti and crêpes for us to “feast” on. Can someone say untraditional???! Yeah-yuh. It was great fun though, and I really love the friends I have. They respect me and let me tell them about Thanksgiving and why I am here. They are like me, and together, we share and enjoy learning about each other. I shared the tradition of going around the circle and telling everyone what one is thankful for. Yahan had the best answer: “The Indians! Otherwise we wouldn’t be here celebrating Thanksgiving”! True dat.
Let’s see, what else. It’s FREEZING! So I’m eating clementines to keep immune from the cold. While in Strasbourg, I don’t think I have even been so cold in my life. Even colder than when I lived in Michigan I think. Shiver me timbers.

Also, last week my host club celebrated its 15 anniversary and I helped one of its founding members prepare for the party. I spread butter on approximately 1 billion crackers, then on top of those crackers, I either slapped on some salmon or some smelly Roquefort cheese. To make it seem as though she wasn’t a slave-driver, I stole equally about 1 billion dried apricots and pistachios throughout the 6 hours of preparation, gobbled them up and called them a reward. No but seriously, it was like a hard day at work! Hanging stuff, moving furniture, dressing Christmas trees, preparing food, calming the bird down from a downfall of party-planning stress, etc. I can officially say that a Frenchie has snapped at me! She snapped because she was stressed, I understand, but still, I was like “Ummmm, I know she didn't”! Lol, it was funny! It was all very worth it though : ) For 6 hours I was hers, and then for the rest of the evening I was my Club’s. I always find that whatever table of Rotarians I sit with, it always seems to be pleasant and they are all very nice. I am blessed. I am spoiled ; )
Oh, I have to tell you what I ate: “cervelas Lyonnais”-pig brains, roasted potatoes, pistachios, yummy and smelly French cheese, wine-soaked and cooked pears, and our weight in bread. Then the kicker-Michel (the woman I helped), she surprised everyone with this huge stuffed beignet towering Christmas tree of a cake. Mmmmm. She’s a good woman that Michel, very interesting, and later on that night she Frenchie-kissed me like 15 times because she was so thankful for my help. I almost got dizzy from the back and forth cheek-kissing action.

And now on a side note, I’d like to tell you something that I absolutely hate: the expression “C’est normal”. The French say it all the time, and I just don’t like to have someone say “It’s normal” after I thank them for a good meal or after they do something nice for me. Really, in French it doesn’t mean “it’s normal”, it’s more like “it’s expected” (which sounds worse) or “as I should” or “don’t mention it”. For example, when I was in Strasbourg I bought a few gifts for people and at one place the merchant started to wrap my gift! It was VERY nice of him! I thanked him and he said “C’est normal”, cold without a smile. Now, I am thinking that “C’est normal” might be a lot better with a smile, then that way, just maybe I could walk away with a smile. Throughout the day, I’d rather carry with me a smiling “oh as I should” then a cold “oh it’s normal”.
Anywhoo, you all have a Wonderful Christmas and A Happy New Year : ) Yesterday I went to church and I sat there and thought to myself that although it is the best to have Christmas with friends and loved ones, and although it makes me sad to not be able to do it this year, for me, Christmas here in Lyon is not what it used to be, and I just keep thinking that before everything, before all the things we have done to "what Christmas really means", the message of Peace and Love thanks to the little baby Jesus is what I am trying to think about.
I miss you all, and I can’t wait to hear about how your holidays went ; )
Joyeux Noël!
Jess
PS, I have attached pictures and my photo website again ; ) I add a lot more photos on it than Facebook, so you can see a lot of what we saw during la Fête and during Strasbourg. And even Thanksgiving!

Saturday, December 1, 2007

AIDS Awareness Day

Today is as some of you may know, Internatioal AIDS Awareness Day. This day always stands out for me because during my undergrad years I was very involved with AIDS Awareness via the UCA Rotaract Club. So, here in France, I am telling people about my involvement and about how important it is to tell people about the disease, the statistics, and the damage it's done.

Furthermore,
MY BOYS ARE GETTING INVOLVED TOO!!!!

Gotta love some Goo Goo Dolls:)

http://www.thetimes.co.za/News/Article.aspx?id=623527

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Best Coversations Ever. NOT.

As I passed by the strikes during the strike parade today in Lyon, I listened in on what some of the other spectators were saying. Here results some of the "best" conversations ever had (and they just say SO much:)
OH and PS, if you can't read this...you're not missing much ;)"


"---Merde alors, c’est affreux, hein ?
-------Non, pas tellement.
----Vous ne trouvez pas cette folie comme affreuse ?
-------Non, pas tellement."


"---T’es d’accord ? T’es pour ou contre?
------Bah ouais, contre la loi. Toi aussi ?
---Ouais, bien sur, je n’habite pas dans le luxe."


My Favorite (between two old men):

"---C’est insupportable. C’est n’importe quoi.
-------Hein quand-même, c’est toujours comme ça. Ça bouge.
---Bah ouais, de toute façon, tout le temps c’est n’importe quoi.
-------Ouais, ouais."

Monday, November 19, 2007

Grrrr. Burg...grrrr...King.

Dear Jessica,

Farmworkers who pick tomatoes for Burger King earn 40 to 50
cents for every 32-pound bucket of tomatoes they pick, a rate
that has not risen significantly in nearly 30 years. Workers who
labor from dawn to dusk must pick two tons of tomatoes to earn
$50 in one day. Recently, McDonalds and others have agreed to
higher wages for these workers, but Burger King has not.

Tell Burger King to improve farmworker wages.
(http://act.oxfamamerica.org/campaign/burgerking/w365g8xrpdeek6e?)

McDonald's and other fast-food chains, including Taco Bell and
Pizza Hut, have committed to increasing wages and enforcing
better working conditions in the fields. But Burger King-the
second-largest hamburger chain in the world-has so far refused
to work with farmworkers to improve wages for those who pick
their tomatoes.

Please tell Burger King (http://act.oxfamamerica.org/campaign/burgerking/w365g8xrpdeek6e?) to join with
McDonald's and others in improving farmworker wages.

Thank you for supporting poor farmers both here and abroad.

Sincerely,

Tim Fullerton
Oxfam America

Friday, November 16, 2007

"Cold, Drunk, Spanish, Revolutionary Pie (in no particular order)"

Howdy Everybody!!
How's everyone doing ?
This letter is called: "Cold, Drunk, Spanish, Revolutionary Pie (in no particular order)".Mmmmmmm. Bon Appétit!
Everything's just peachy over here what with all the strikes, the weather, the approaching holidays, the indefinite university holiday, etc…
Haha, let me break that one down for ya'll so it's not so big of a pill to swallow!
France is at it has always been. We'll say that so as to keep this country normal.
And Jessica, well she is not as Jessica has always been. We'll say that to keep me as abnormal as ever!

When I got to France, when I lived in Tours, for about three weeks all was well. I was doing great in class (if not getting bored in class), I was making friends left and right and then hanging out with those friends all the time, I was truly living in a slice of Heaven taken from a pie called France. Then, near the end of my time in Tours, I was quickly forced to think about mortality, immortality, going to Heaven, living through Hell on earth, new responsibilities, friend's situations across the ocean, and close friend's situations in Tours. Frankly, it was as if that nice slice had never been cut, and someone or something threw the pie in my face instead.

Well, this past week was a douzy (I won't say I had a bad week! I don't like to say that! I have bad moments!)! I've just had an enormous load to think about. Oh, and I think I have figured out who or what keeps throwing pies in my face, making me feel like a clown. Okay, so it's either French bureaucracy, Old Man Winter, or French bureaucracy. DING DING DING! You guessed it ; )

***********Please note right now, that I am gonna spill. I am gonna spew out some ideas, and I just don't want you to think that I hate the French government just yet, or that I want to come home just yet because though I will complain, the situation could be a lot worse, and the reasons for everything that is going on in France right now has justification, and me, I am learning so many things in so many different areas of life—all at once. I honestly can't imagine coming home right now--as is--and not wondering about what is going on in France at the moment; I'm kind of hooked (and kind of scared!). This stuff is monumental, especially the University strikes… ************

Okay Problema nùmero uno:
France had crappy summer weather. It rained and then rained and guess what, rained some more!Thus, France gets no autumn; France gets no pie. We got pretty leaves and ugly dead leaves flooding the sidewalks, and the temperature is frozen winter icicles. And it even snowed Wednesday night! At least that's just the temp. in Lyon. Also people please keep in mind that with cold weather and cold bodies, people get sick and don't stop sniffling until spring. I got a pretty funny, gross story for ya…once when walking in Strasbourg with a friend, we counted how many loogies where spat about on sidewalks. OH MY GOSH. It's disgusting! And Lyon too!! People hawk them everywhere, and it's weird because I have never actually seen someone let one go (ummmm, which is a GOOD thing!!), but they are there nonetheless. Umm, to make that short and sweet--it's been friggin' freezing lately and with SNOW!!!

Problema nùmero dos:
Public transportation strikes. Again, for the second time in a season, France has gone on another massive transportation strike.
Go here: http://edition.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/europe/11/15/france.strikes/index.html#cnnSTCText
This past Wednesday my academic life was affected (yet again!) by the strikes. I didn't have two classes because my teacher comes in from Paris every Wednesday, and well this week, she didn't come in from Paris. In total, since school has started, we have not had 5 classes, and it's like the 8th week people! You do the math! If that were America, they'd put in a substitute. Not here! Teachers skip class, students skip class, and the administration doesn't know what taking roll means. I don't even know how to say that in French, cuz I've never heard it! Haha. Also, private lives are being affected as well. There was a concert an hour away in Rumilly on Thursday night, a concert from an awesome group named Dobacaracol, and I wanted to go you know! I miss going to live shows, dancing, singing along, being silly, laughing… Well, turns out that my cheap train ride and awesome concert did not happen because the trains are all blocked off because of "les grèves", the strikes. Besides that, even if I had gotten to go, I'd probably still be stuck in a freezing cold train in the middle of the Haute Savoie, hating the French Alps outside my window. And you know, I just can't afford to hate the French Alps at the moment, so it's a good thing I didn't go…my host counselor told me that she would take me this winter to see all the snow-covered peaks, so it's a real good thing that the thought of them still makes me happy ; ) On a different note, but pertaining to the same band…I have a friend who did go see them in concert in Metz, on a seemingly easy trip, on an hour long train ride (a train ride he had a return ticket for!), and he got stranded in the city all by his lonesome for two nights because the SNCF (France's RR) let him know that he wouldn't be going anywhere. He had to get a hotel, he had to worry like crazy, and thus he had to sprout some grey hairs. CRAZY CRAZY. So until the public transportation worker's retirement plans are worth retiring for, France will return back to serfdom, and we'll all be working on farms, milking our own goats, and eating our own stout goat cheese. As for me, I prefer Neufchâtel, Beaufort, or Compté, all "cow" cheeses, so I would really like to see those trains up and working. But I mean, who needs school and/or transportation when you can earn by day a good night's sleep? The agricultural life seems all to appealing to me right now among these crazy days.

Oh, and if you really must know, I have a gag reflex to goat cheese, I can't stand the smell or taste of it, unless it's really mixed in something deliciously palatable. Six years ago, on the plane ride home with me from France, I accidentally left some goat cheese in my purse, and when I opened it up in the comfort of my parent's home, I almost puked…and I still almost do.

Problema nùmero tres:
Right now in France 41 universities (and counting!) out of 85 are blocked, including mine. School is out of session. The reason: for about two weeks, French students have been rallying against a law proposed by Valérie Pécresse, the Minister for Higher Education, which concerns French universities freedoms and responsibilities, also known as the law on the autonomy of universities. Basically, here's the gist: students don't want the law to pass because the law will put universities in charge of themselves, instead of the government, "l'État", in charge of the universities. It distresses the students and university workers because if this law passes, the tuition will rise, the university staff will shrink, a student's self-representation will diminish, and external people will be given bigger roles in the decision making process. A university's budget will be its own business.
For those of you who can read French—do it.
If you can't, go here and read this; it was the best "en anglais" site I could find, and it's outdated.
So here is my story: I only have classes on Wednesday and Thursday, you see, and so Wednesday when I went to class, not much in the strike genre was going on. I went to class, a few students were handing out flyers, and that was it. The flyers were invites to go rally in Lyon in Place Bellecour on Wed. and Thurs. afternoon. It didn't seem like a big deal really, and it was a short day because I didn't have my first two classes because of the train strikes (i.e. the Parisian teacher). Well then, Thursday comes around, I get to school, and 15 trillion students are in every courtyard they could find at my university. Loudspeakers, blow horns, hot mics, "revolutionary" booklets, scarves, hats, sweaters, gloves, red noses and ears, and goose bumps all around. It was frightening. I got scared quick. I trust they mean no harm, and they just want to, you know, "fight for their right", but it was scary seeing that many people (youth at that!) in an enclosed space with loud voices and fists in the air. I have never seen anything like it. I wasn't even sure why I was at school at that point, it really seemed like every student who would be or should be in class was outside in the frozen air, chanting heavily and blocking up passageways. I got through just in time to see my teacher's red backpack climbing up the stairs, so I followed. We get in class, and hear nothing but the bothersome multitude for an entire hour, and then thirty minutes before class ended, a group of students patrolling the hallways opened our door, and told us that we had to leave. STUDENTS! Students came in, and told us and the TEACHER that we had to leave! It was unprecedented, unique, cumbersome. Never have I EVER seen anything like that. It was very scary at first; my immediate thought was Columbine, but when one of the students struck up conversation, telling our teacher that he was in his English class (that they wouldn't be having Friday), my pulse calmed. Turns out, administration was locking all the doors, and these students took it upon themselves to kick everyone out. No more class that day starting at 4:30, no class Friday, no class Monday until after noon thirty. That's the verdict, we'll see if it changes. And in an act of true revolt, these same students found as many chairs, bureaus, desks, that they could and lodged them up against doors and windows. (See my pictures attached.)
So, we are blocked out of school, literally and figuratively.

PS. Dear parents and loved ones who worry about me, It wasn't really like Columbine. I was just being honest with my first thought. I was in no harm. None of the punk kids with Mohawks pushed me to the ground and told me to spread 'em. Don't worry, it's not like I have to go back to school or anything ; )
Love,Jess
This is a photo of a sondage of how many students are participating throughout France, note that a big blue dot is on Lyon, which means that as of Nov. 13--three days ago--there were more than 150,000 students participating. Surely that has augmented. It's funny, just by looking at the map it looks like all the mountaineous regions, all of those students are like "Meh, whatever"!
Oh and FYI: Moins=less than Plus=more

These photos were taken at my university today.

These are the chairs and bureaus that the protesting students pushed up against the doors.Problema nùmero cautro:
Yeah, so this problem doesn't influence me directly, but I am in Lyon, so the topic is right under my nose. Lyon is famous for its Beaujolais Nouveau celebration. Wednesday night at midnight marked this seasons Beaujolais Nouveau opening. Beaujolais is a unique wine that only last a few weeks and has to be drank in that time. While some experts say that there are some sorts of Beaujolais that are good for ten years, most people beg to differ, and the city truly celebrates by drinking and/or selling all of the Beaujolais it can get its hands on. People take off work the next day. People don't go to sleep so that when stores open up on Thursday morning, they can be the first to get their greedy, shivering hands on a bottle, or 50. People survive off Beaujolais for sustenance. The running joke here in the region is that we don't have two rivers, no no, we have three, and the third one is called Beaujolais ; )
To give a little run down of the problema…the Beaujolais vineyards north of Lyon use Gamay grapes, which create a fruity wine, and the wine depends heavily on the temperature. For example, in Bourgogne (Burgundy), just north of the Rhône-Alpes region (Lyon's region), wine is made from Pinot Noir grapes, and it is said that the Gamay grapes are a mutant of Pinor Noir grapes. Because of the temperature and topographical change, the Gamay grapes mutated, forming a sweeter grape. Now, along with the region's temperature is her soil, which is very important too, and when you put that all together, when the Beaujolais has a good year, business is good and busy. It's sold all over the world, and exported overnight almost immediately. Wine producers make a killing. Well, this year was not a good year. The summer was cold, windy and rainy, affecting the chemistry and richness of the soil. So problema una for Beaujolais this year was the weather, problema dos, was transportation. Without all of the 700 trains up and running, Beaujolais can only wish to be so popular this year. The market will surely suffer, and I am sure that within this coming year I will hear about it 248028452 times.
Problema nùmero cinco:
The holidays are coming up. I don't have any American friends here in Lyon…so I'm getting homesick quick. I want some cranberry sauce, some of my momma's stuffing, and some apple pie and/or chocolate pie and/or cherry pie and/or peach cobbler. I want to get stuffed and then loaf on my designated spot of couch with my puppy dog. I want to have movie day on Thanksgiving and Christmas just like we always do. I want to hug and kiss the cooks, help do the extensive load of dishes, and then be hugged and kissed. I want to sit in the living room with my brother and make fun of dad snoring in the lazy-boy. And then I want the leftovers after I take snooze as a peaceful angel. Gah, I'm going to cry.
I think maybe what I will do is follow the lead of my friend Ashlee, another Rotary Ambassadorial Scholar who is in Germany, and get all of my friends ( who are all Asian)…and get all of the Asians together in my apartment, tell them to bring a dish, and then tell them about Thanksgiving while we feast on a non-traditional Thanksgiving dinner.
And then maybe I'll cry.

Boy oh boy, don't ever take anything for granted folks.

So anyway, before this quickly gets any mushier, I'm gonna go now!
Send me some shooga.

With good tidings and cheer and cornucopias and me caroling,
Jess