Hellooooo
Where to begin. Well classes are long, boring, and stupid. On Wednesday, my Islam and the West course began, which was absolutely painful. I suppose it was because it was the first class, but I'm not a fan of the professor. He talks in circles and reminds me of Carol, so you know we're already in a bad situation. Oh well, at least Allie and Lia are suffering through that class with me. Wednesday night was the FIE welcome reception dinner. We were able to meet other students who are at FIE as well as mingle with different teachers. They gave us free drinks so it was worth it. While talking to other students, Lia was talking to a kid named Chris from some school in Indiana, who coincidentally had my name and was looking for me. He knows Nikki from Marist and she told both of us one an-others names, I just forgot his until that moment. Whoopsie. After, the large group of like 14 girls from Marist tried going to the Imperial College bar, but when there was a cover fee, we hopped on the tube and went into Camden with Chris and his friends. Camden is a kind of sketchy neighborhood full of bars though. We went to a pub called the Elephant Tusk I think. It was cool; I like interacting with locals. I think that's one of the aspects I love about this culture, that you don't drink to get drunk like we do on the weekends. You just chill in a pub and have a beer and it's totally casual. At one point in the night, Dana disappeared with Chris' friend Mike, literally giving me a heart attack. They went for a nice stroll around the neighborhood, and were not answering their phones, and being the naturally paranoid person that I am, I started buggin. They came back like a half an hour later and all was fine, but Allie, Erin and another girl from the program came home and Lia and the rest of them went to another bar.
On Thursday, the five of us (Lia, Allie, Dana, Erin and I) don't have class. But we all agreed to not set alarms and when we woke up we would explore. We got up around 12 and left around 2 and walked across Hyde Park to Notting Hill. We went the wrong way and ended up going through a different neighborhood, which was eclectic. There was a mall which is good to know. When we were done walking through there we headed the direction of Notting Hill and found Diana's cafe. We didn't eat there, and instead walked over to High Street, which is becoming our stomping grounds since it is so close. We ate dinner at a pub called the Goat's Tavern, which was absolutely delicious. We headed home because FIE got us tickets to see The 39 Steps. I wasn't a fan of it, and pretty much napped through it but I think everyone else liked it. Afterwards, we went out for Ice Cream and then met up with some of the house at a pub. Allie, Dana and Erin and I left after like 20 minutes and went home.
On Friday, I didn't have class until 1 so I got to sleep until 11. I got up and went to the second Islam and the West class, which was still very painful. Our teachers keep talking about some site called Moodle, but I just want iLearn. Ermm on Friday night the five of us went to Princess Diana's favorite Pizza place, and it wasn't as good as we had hoped it would have been. Way too much hype over it in my opinion, but I am a Pizza snob so who knows. That night we all stayed in and hung out because we had to be up very early for a trip on Saturday.
Saturday morning was the earliest since arriving, waking up at 6:30 to be on a bus at 7:45. Allie, Erin and I ran to Starbucks beforehand. When we got to school to check in, Lia, Allie and I found out our names weren't on the list because we found out we weren't actually signed up. We thought we were, but we weren't but they still let us go so who cares. The day was a trip to Stonehenge and Bath. Stonehenge was about an hour and a half away, but for the parts of the bus ride I was awake for, the country is beautiful. Stonehenge was literally a bunch of stones in the middle of Kansas amounts of open land. When we got there we had an hour to walk around and do whatever, but we didn't even need it. It's one of those things that you go to just to see it and once you see it that's it. So we took our pictures, appreciated the vista as well as the nearby sheep, and got back on the bus to go to Bath. Bath was another hour and half for which I got another great nap in. The bus toured us around the town a bit, showing us the most expensive housing, called the Royal Crest, which was shaped like a horse shore. When we got there we had a museum tour of the ancient Roman Baths. They were really cool because some of them were from natural, un-touched hot springs. The museum was actually kind of cool because it had preserved parts of the village courtyard in it as well as the ancient Roman stones for the ground. We all felt like we were in Rome, not England. After the tour, we had about three hours to wander around Bath. We got lunch in a pub, delicious again (and I branched out of my Turkey/ Chicken sandwiches to a Middle Eastern wrap)and went to the Jane Austen Exhibition. Afterwards we walked around, looked into shops. The whole town reminded me of my family. It was right up their alley's. My mom would have adored the little shops, the token guitar player in the corner, and the street vendors. The coolest thing about it was that it wasn't like roads, it was old village styled where the cars were on the outskirts of everything. All the shops faced inward, courtyard style, and it reminded me of Sienna. I really liked it and would love to go back. We didn't really have much time to do a lot except see it, but I still felt like it was a great experience.
When we got home, we all decided we wanted to go out. We went into Piccadily Circus to a bar called O'Neills. It was cool because it was college kids and had multiple levels, each level having a different theme kind of. On the top floor before the terrace, there was a live band, my favorite level. Below that was dancing and below that was tables and below that was a mix of both and the bottom floor was bathrooms, which had women giving out free gum while trying to scam you into giving them money. It was weird. It was a little bit of a rough night, so I was not in the mood to hear that Americans suck. When we were on the terrace, someone was yelling it at us and I don't really know my exact reaction but Lia just goes Yeah I'm from Canada and the guy goes "Oh, you're fine" and walked away. Absolutely ridiculous. We stayed until the lights came on, and even then we were talking to random assortments of people. Lia was getting great pick up lines from an Irishmen, I was talking to someone from France, and everyone was just everywhere. When we finally left, we really wanted fried rice so we went to the Chinese Place next door and the guy said we could use the bathroom. When I got back to the front, the guy was yelling at us because he claims he saw one of us take chop sticks off a table(no one did) and started telling us he was going to call the police. LOL. Going out is such a fiasco here. We pretty much got home and crashed.
Today is lazy Sunday, which is fine because everything here's closed anyway. I think it's finally hitting me that I'm in London because today's the first day I'm feeling homesick. Hmm.Homework, Internships, Skyping with the fam. Peace.







