Friday, June 29, 2012

Arrival

After some long days of travel, a few lost bag scares, and a lot of in flight mystery meat meals, I am in Kathmandu. Whenever you go to a foreign country, there is always a lot to take in, but one of the things, so far, that has struck me the most has been the driving. Before I left, someone described the situation as Mr. Toad's Wild Ride and after having been driven around the city from the airport to the Fulbright Commission, to lunch, back to the Commission, and finally to the flat I will be living in for the next month, I think I agree. No one is going to let you enter the lane, or pass, you just have to take it. You drive as motorcyclists weave in and out with precarious loads of people and goods, all while bicycles and people try to assert themselves into the flow or cross the street. Before coming here I thought bicycling in Los Angeles was one of the most difficult places in the world. I had it soooo good there!

So much more to say and so much more for me to take in. Today I am having lunch with a friend who is just finishing up her study abroad in Nepal and Monday we start ESL training and Nepali class!

Monday, June 25, 2012

To note:

This blog is not an official Department of State blog, and the views and information presented are my own and do not represent the Fulbright Program or the U.S. Department of State.


Also, I leave for my nearly 48 hours of travel on Wednesday morning flying San Francisco, New York, Brussels, New Delhi, then arriving to Kathmandu. I received a little advice from youtube that may be practical for traveling not just to Nepal: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pX4b18gl6b8

Saturday, June 23, 2012

4 days to go

Just returned from Orientation in Austin. Met my program director, Robin, and the eight other Americans who I will be heading over with. Packing is in full swing now. Here is a time lapse of the starting process:




Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Here I Go Again


Source: www.mayhewinternational.org

            In roughly two weeks, I set off for my longest adventure yet. Previously, I have been fortunate enough to do home stays in Spain and Costa Rica; a year later, I received a study grant to live and study in Italy the summer before I went to Pitzer College. While at Pitzer, I lived in Beijing and Botswana (whose stories you can find in this blog). Now I am headed to Nepal on a Fulbright Scholarship. 
            Before receiving the packet that listed every country to which the Fulbright sent people, I thought I was dead set on Nepal.  I had chosen between it and Botswana junior year for study abroad and was only swayed by my cousin Francesca who had just returned from working in Sub-Saharan Africa. But when I opened the Fulbright booklet, I became like a kid in a candy shop, wanting everything! I stared at the lengthy list of countries and realized that it would be much quicker to create a list of countries that I wouldn’t want to go to rather than make a list of those I did. It was done before I even picked up a pen, none. I could come up with viable reasons for why I would want to go to every country. But, I began reading the provided bios and was quickly able to eliminate many countries. Countries like Mongolia where applicants needed to be prepared for “harsh weather and development issues” (read: stuck inside a poorly insolated house for a Siberian winter) were quickly ruled out. After peeling through the pages, it finally came down to a few things:

1)   I wanted to go to a country, and for that matter, a region I had yet to experience.
2)   I wanted to live with a host family. It is not only the best way to develop one’s language skills, but also the best way to integrate oneself into the host culture.
3)   I wanted to have a legitimate chance to get chosen. That meant I had to give myself some sort of competitive shot at going.  It meant not applying to places as an undergrad like Hong Kong, who only has two research grants and I would be competing against people who were doing their PhD dissertations. This also falls under that category that Nigel Boyle (who oversees the entire Fulbright process at Pitzer), said not to apply to - any place that plays cricket, because the odds are some of the worst by far. Places like the West Bank with only two slots for teaching were also left out due to the sheer number of applicants who applied.

With that criteria, some trips to the library (yes people my age know what books are), and talking with several of my friends who attended the Pitzer in Nepal program for study abroad, the decision was solidified. Then the fun process of applying and the torturous waiting game began. But I will get into that in further post.

As always, please feel free to ask any question or suggest topics that you want me to cover, or give me advice.

Vincent