Capital University

Doreen Jones' Italy Blog

  1. There's No Place Like Home...

    A Rather Climactic Ending...
    posted on 06/23/06 by Doreen Jones
  2. Planes, Trains, and Automobiles...

    My Journey Home... This post is written, but I don't have it on this computer, so we'll get it loaded eventually... Silly limited computer access...
    posted on 06/06/06 by Doreen Jones
  3. Wrapping it up, Packing it up, Slacking it up...

    Italy trip winds down, packing begins, and I avoid homework until the last minute...
    posted on 05/15/06 by Doreen Jones
    1 comments
    Last comment on 05/15/06
  4. Trips, Rips, and Puppy Search 2006

    Class Fieldtrips, A Faux Pas on the Stairs, and More Hunting Online…
    posted on 05/08/06 by Doreen Jones
    1 comments
    Last comment on 05/10/06
  5. Flowers, Rain, Men in Stripes, and Ghastly Math Skills

    A week, a few drinks, a flower festival, a 600 euro mixup, and Swiss Guards who forgot their watches. ********New Photos Posted 8 May 2006*******
    posted on 05/02/06 by Doreen Jones
    2 comments
    Last comment on 05/10/06
  6. Quick Update

    Short week...
    posted on 04/26/06 by Doreen Jones
  7. Foods I Miss from Home...

    Things I miss and don't miss about food in the States
    posted on 04/19/06 by Doreen Jones
    3 comments
    Last comment on 05/10/06
  8. Work Hard, Play Hard

    A job hunt, a resume review, and more socializing than you ever thought I could handle!
    posted on 04/19/06 by Doreen Jones
    2 comments
    Last comment on 05/11/06
  9. Ups, Downs, and a Lot of Time Online

    Bomarzo, Internet Craziness, Family Drama
    posted on 04/10/06 by Doreen Jones
    2 comments
    Last comment on 04/16/06
  10. Sunny Days... FINALLY!

    Boring Week Closes with a Trip to Southern Italy
    posted on 04/03/06 by Doreen Jones
    1 comments
    Last comment on 04/16/06
  11. From Roma to Viterbo to Spoleto

    Making it legal and una piccolo luna di miele.
    posted on 03/29/06 by Doreen Jones
    6 comments
    Last comment on 04/16/06
  12. The Apartment From The Black Lagoon, or “Murphy’s Law”

    A lot of whining about my crummy apartment… be prepared for some negativity, people... read the Siena post if you don't want to hear me whine, haha
    posted on 03/20/06 by Doreen Jones
    2 comments
    Last comment on 04/16/06
  13. Bigger Family, Siena, and Dada

    The lighter post of the two most recent... I get a bigger Family, and tell you about my week
    posted on 03/20/06 by Doreen Jones
    2 comments
    Last comment on 04/16/06
  14. Lines, Connections, and Shopping

    Why being in Italy is like applying to graduate school 24/7
    posted on 03/13/06 by Doreen Jones
  15. And the plot thickens…

    An entry on the randomness of life, the craziness of Italian Bureaucracy, and a Bostonian Ex-Patriot.
    posted on 03/06/06 by Doreen Jones
    2 comments
    Last comment on 03/07/06
  16. Why I can never be Italian...

    A short entry for those of you who do not want to read my Venice entry, but still want to read something…
    posted on 02/28/06 by Doreen Jones
    6 comments
    Last comment on 03/06/06
  17. “4 Restrooms and a Pickpocket”

    So you thought my Ireland entry was long... be prepared
    posted on 02/28/06 by Doreen Jones
    3 comments
    Last comment on 03/06/06
  18. Dublin... the extended version

    A REALLLLLLLLLLLY long entry about Dublin and everything we did there...
    posted on 02/20/06 by Doreen Jones
    4 comments
    Last comment on 03/06/06
  19. "On Holiday" in Dublin...

    The website is not letting me type in body, so this will be in the abstract, and will have to be brief.  Kevin and I are in Dublin for about a week.  We woke up on Saturday morning at 3:30am to catch the early train to Rome, and we managed to find our way through the maze they call the metro and to the airport.  

    We checked into our hostel yesterday afternoon and we had 2 Spanish roommates, both guys, which was a little awkward for me, but since we're really not paying much for accomodations, it evens out.  We spent time yesterday at Trinity College and saw the book of Kells.  That was really spectacular.  We got locked in and had to find a back way out of the college, so we did a little exploring and made it back alright.  We did the American thing and found our way to a Burger King for lunch, but I promise that fish and chips is in my future, haha.  

    Today, we went to a modern art museum, the mall, and the National Gallery of Ireland.  We saw a lot of paintings by people we'd never heard of, but we managed to see Monet, Manet, and Renoir, so that was amazing.  We think we walked about 50 miles today or something.  I am already missing Italy.  When we hear someone speaking in Italian, we get homesick for Viterbo.  It's cute, but I can't imagine how I will feel coming home after essentially 18 weeks away from America.

    Tomorrow we are going to go to another art museum, and walk around some more to figure out what fun things there are to do.  We'll probably go to St. Stephen's Green as well.  We have a Valentine's Day date to go see an Irish Play at the Abbey Theatre.  Maybe we'll even get to go on one of those double decker buses, ha ha.

    It is nice to hear people speaking English, even if I can't understand the half of it.  We've seen so many Mc Donald's and Burger Kings, it's outrageous, so if anything makes me feel better about being away from home, it's nothing a whopper can't fix, ha ha.

    I should go.  I'm getting windy.  Mom, don't forget to water my plants!

    A Presto! (or Seeya, Chaps!--Dublin Style)
    Doreen
    posted on 02/12/06 by Doreen Jones
    4 comments
    Last comment on 02/18/06
  20. Food and Life...

    click to read more… unless you’re hungry
    posted on 02/06/06 by Doreen Jones
    1 comments
    Last comment on 02/06/06
  21. A General Update…

    (ATM mixups, sales, and small talk about the weather…click to find out)
    posted on 01/27/06 by Doreen Jones
    3 comments
    Last comment on 02/04/06
  22. Our First Trip to Rome…


                This weekend, on the 21st, we took our first trip to Rome.  We had planned to use these special day trip tickets we can get through our rail station to go see the Vatican.  Later we found out that the group was taking one of the paid trips to Roma, which made more sense.  We will do the Vatican later.  We took a long train ride, and a metro and wound up at the Coliseum.  How do you describe something that is 2 millennia old?  The entire trip was full of marble covered everything and Kevin was just drinking in all the history.  It was a bit of a bummer that we did not get to go inside for our tour because people were late, but we will have more opportunities to go back.  We saw a lot of different ancient Roman ruins, and we took a lot of pictures.  It was hard to hear what our guide was saying sometimes because there were so many people talking in our group and not paying attention.  That was frustrating, so we tried to get right up to the front of the line all of the time.  I think the tour guide thought I was stalking her.  We saw the Trevy Fountain, and I came up with a slogan for it.  I think that they should adopt it: “The Trevy Fountain: It looks natural, but it’s Ren Faire!”  We decided that we should go to lunch with other USAC-ers in order to keep together and get to the train station on time and still get to see other spots in Rome.  The group had like 15 people in it by the time we took off, so finding a place to eat and deciding where to go was a problem: too many cooks in the kitchen.  Eventually, the group split off and we saw some different architecture and took pictures of everything.  Our feet were killing us by the end of the day.  We had a ton of gelato, though, which I hear is the way to heal every ailment.  Eventually we hooked up with two other groups of people and made our way back to the train station and home.  We made a nice little simple meal and watched a movie and went to bed.  I fell asleep at 10:30.  That is the second earliest since we’ve been here (the earliest being our first night here.).  I put up a lot of pictures, so have fun.

    posted on 01/24/06 by Doreen Jones
    4 comments
    Last comment on 03/04/06
  23. Everyday Stuff…


                Enough with the faux pas, I should talk a little about what I experience every day.  I have two campuses to walk to, generally.  One campus is a 10 minute walk, and the other is a 15 minute walk.  The 15 minute walk is a restored monastery-turned-prison-turned-University Facility.  That is a strange progression, I know, but it seems that a lot of prisons in Italy were moved or emptied and rebuilt and so the old prisons, which were usually abandoned castles, monasteries, etc., have been slowly reclaimed by cities as public halls or by universities.  The school has wonderful auditorium space, conference rooms, offices, and all of the modern conveniences.  It also has a lot of the unexpected because its former use.  There are beautiful frescos inside and out, a well, architecture to be appreciated, and newly restored dentals and ceiling art.  Our classrooms are actually in a new section of buildings, and we are the first students to have class there.  The Italian students will arrive in February for their semester.  We have a different class schedule because our group is trying top be more aligned with the United States schedule.

                I have realized that I should be taking time to learn how to cook new things, but without a mentor, I am really lost.  We’ve only been out for a few meals since we arrived, so I am getting limited inspiration.  I really miss my cookbooks and being able to get online whenever I want to look for something new to make.  I realize how very few ingredients I actually cook with here.  Our meals are olive oil, garlic, oregano, basil, tomatoes, and salads.  We’ve had some sandwiches, but it just is starting to feel repetitive.  It is very hard to cook without meat.  It is not that we can’t find meat, just that it is so very expensive.  Right now the exchange rate is $1.30 for every Euro.  Here, I can get about a half kilo of ground beef for 7.50 in Euros… this early in my trip, I am unwilling to spend a lot of money on food.  I would like to save a reasonable amount of money for traveling.  We are trying to find reasonable airfare and accommodations for our two weeks break.  We think Paris would be fun, and we might have free housing in London.  We’re just not sure yet, so I want to save.

                Right now my fingers are numb because I am typing this in my apartment with the windows open (because of the puddle problem, you know), and will post it on the Capital page later.  I digress.  I had an entry that I wanted to use from my leather bound journal that I write in every night, but now that I look at it, the writing is not very good, so I will end now.  More later.  Mom, don’t forget to water my plants.

    Ciao!

    posted on 01/24/06 by Doreen Jones
  24. Faux Pas…


               I took an intercultural communications class as a first year student at Capital.  Actually, it was my first semester there.  I had a lot of fun in that class.  Some of the subjects the class topics covered are becoming more and more useful.  We learned that certain “non-verbals” have different significance in different cultures.  For those of you who are either communications deficient, or who are just plain apathetic about communications, nonverbal communication covers a lot of different ideas: intonation, hand gestures, facial expressions, etc.  You get the picture.  For instance, if you give some the peace sign in Germany, you are giving them the finger, capicsce?  Well, here in Italy there are some of those innocent things that you wouldn’t think are objectionable that might be, or vice versa.  Unless they understand the American significance, flipping the bird at someone here will just confuse them.  However, I personally made the mistake of talking with my hands the wrong way.  There is a cute little hand sign that means that something tastes good.  It is similar to the ASL sign for apple: you take your index finger and place it under your cheek bone and twist it back and forth and say “buono” (good).  Now, I knew what that meant, but still I was able to mess it up anyway.  I was talking to my landlady about a week ago.  She asked me some questions about Kevin, and I, in true American form, put my finger to my cheek in thought, rolling my eyes up to the ceiling.  I said “hmm”… as I attempted to discover exactly what she meant by the question.  I realized she was asking how he liked it here, and I said “e bene” (he’s doing well, or more accurately: he’s good).  She gave me this horrified look.  The lesson today is not to talk with your hands even if you think you know what you are doing!  I’m kidding, but it really sounded to her like I was a cannibal and Kevin was tasty!

                Ok, other faux pas have become apparent here.  For instance, if you show up on time (like at 5 til), you will probably will wait for 10 minutes before an Italian will arrive, however, if you are having school or a business meeting and you are quite literally “on time” you are late.  That is definitely something my high school band director said to us every week “if you’re on time, you are late.”  Wow.   So being late to school is a bad thing.  With our class today, our professor said that she hates it when people are late.

                Other faux pas are noise and exuberance in public.  It seems that no one here gets excited on the street or in public unless it’s during the passiagata (evening walk).   Being a loud American is completely unacceptable.  In fact, I am so used to the quiet that even in the peak of the day I think my music is too loud.  The pigeons wake me in the morning.  They sit atop the cute little tile roof of the house next door (that is to say RIGHT next door, pressed up against my own building) or on the patio on top of the southwestern beams protruding from the exterior.  It is so quiet here that their little noises, not even cooing, just the noises rouses me.  If the pigeons are loud, imagine how quiet the people are!

                I found out another faux pas the hard way.  Don’t leave a lot of food on your plate here.  Most people will finish a whole pizza themselves for one course of a three-course meal, plus vino, caffe, and dessert.  It is apparently a sign that you did not like the food if you leave a lot on your plate no matter if you are watching your figure or not.  So those of you on Weight Watchers, forget it while you’re here!

                There are some American faux pas that are not faux pas here.  For instance, one of campuses is older, and it looks as if the classrooms have not been painted in a very long time.  There is graffiti all over the walls.  In America, if we had a new group of students from a foreign country coming to study in one of our universities, there is a good chance that the administrators would think it a good idea to paint over the swear words and swastikas on the walls.  Another faux pas in America that is not a faux pas here has to do with bumping into people.  This might just be a “mid-western” concept, but when I accidentally bump into someone on the sidewalk, I say “excuse me.”  Here, it is not necessary to say “scusi” if you knock into someone.  One of the girls on our trip went on a rant about how impolite everyone here was.  It was a long rant.  Eventually, I tried to get her to understand that her problem lay only in cultural differences, but it was really to no avail.  While I understand and try to accommodate cultural differences (and sometimes fail miserably, like with my landlady), I can admit my wrongs on a public forum like this.  It is upsetting to me that many of the students on my trip are so ethnocentric and cannot even admit that the littlest thing like saying excuse me on the street, might not be wrong, but just dissimilar.  That is my own rant.

    posted on 01/24/06 by Doreen Jones
    1 comments
    Last comment on 02/08/06
  25. Grand Arrival!

    A brief overview for those of you who did not get a phone call (that is to say for all of you except my parents, haha).   I had the unque experience of going on a study abroad with someone I know, my fiance.  Kevin and I flew from Cleveland to JFK without a hitch, really.  Our flight was delayed slightly, which is pretty normal.  Then at JFK three different air desks were tried when we were looking for directions before the fourth had a helpful person standing behind it. There were heaps of escalators, a lot of those handy-dandy moving runways, and a “Disney Tram” to get to the counter. We waited for 4 hours to board our plane because our flight to Paris was delayed.  We had McDonalds, which was our last hamburger for a long, long time, we assume.  We met some other USAC-ers while we waited, and as usual, my first impressions of them turned out a little wrong.  I’m not usually a good judge of people’s personalities when they are putting on their “good faces.”  Anyway, this is supposed to be brief.  In Paris, a girl on our trip who is from New York decided that since she had the least flight experience (I had the most of all the East Coast kids) that she would be pushy and bossyand make us almost late for our flight.  She insisted on making us do all sorts of unnecessary walking through security, customs, etc, when we should have been able to follow the signs that Kevin pointed out as “what to follow.”  (Kevin was the only other person who had flown internationally in our group, who had also been to Charles de Gaulle before... did I mention that we were in Paris and Kevin speaks French?)  That was a massive headache.  Needless to say, I avoid the New Yorker like the plague.  I probably got about 2 hours of sleep in tiny spurts on the flights to Paris and Rome, which means that I was basically awake for about 30 hours before I finally got to sleep with a nice pillow and a warm bed. 

    Somewhere between Paris and Rome, Air France lost Kevin’s luggage, mostly because of the layover that we had.  His bag got mis-marked.  It was very strange because our bags were chekced together, and mine was not mis-tagged.  Three other east coast kids lost their bags as well.  While Kevin was in the airport, the director made me go sit on the bus with the other students.  I'll be honest, I'm not the best at meeting new people, and this was a little more frightening than I was expecting.  Why, you ask?  Because the girls on this trip are so boy-crazy.  One of them even said she had dibs on 2 of the guys (including Kevin) until I told her that we were engaged and that she should back off.  He was neither on the bus, nor had she seen him yet, and she was placing claims.  It really ruffled my feathers.  Kevin came back without his luggage after 2 hours or something.  No worries, Kevin’s bag was safely returned to his custody on Wednesday morning when he was wearing his last clean pair of socks!  Whew, that was close, eh?  But I am getting ahead of myself. 

    We stayed in a hotel for the first night and I roomed with a nice Aussie girl and three very pushy girls.  I have discovered that Kevin and I are quite likely the least spoiled and most poor people on this trip, which was no surprise.  Even the nice kids seem like they have had everything handed to them.  Such was most definitely the case with my three other roommates.  My Aussie friend is a sweetheart, but she too is affluent, though she seems British in that she does not flaunt it like the other “Daddy’s girls” on the trip.  Again, I am getting ahead of myself.  The first morning in Italy, Kevin had a cappuccino… and liked it!  Can you say “This coffee fiend is proud?”

    We toured the city a little bit and were given our apartment.  It is just the two of us here with a really large bedroom with a queen bed, a set of bunk beds, a closet, a dresser and a wardrobe that fills an entire wall.  We could go shopping for weeks and weeks (which is possible with all the cute little stores around here) and have unlimited funding and not be able to fill all the space with clothing.  The draw backs to our apartment?  We have a tiny kitchen, radiator heat, and although this sounds odd, newly remodeled EVERYTHING.  The new renovations were finished before we got here.  There is construction dirt everywhere, and the worst part is that the walls weren’t given time to breathe.  Most of Viterbo is constructed with pepperino stone.  Our apartment building is 500 years old, and since they did not invent Vodafone at that point, no one knew that the pepperino stone could block cell signals.  So, it takes a little while for the plaster on the walls to learn who to work in its new environment.  We learned this the hard way: by finding puddles all over the place.  The puddles are formed when the humidity in the air is trapped by the newly-sealed, not-yet-settled plaster, terra cotta flooring and paint.  The humid air stays on a cold floor without circulation and there is condensation.  It starts out small like the beads of condensation on your lemonade glasses in summers in Ohio.  You know the ones I’m thinking of: they’re the kind the make those rings on your mother’s antique table that you got put in the corner for creating when you were seven… so it didn’t happen to me, but maybe it happened to you?   I digress.  After the little beads form, they attract other beads, which turn into puddles under your bed.  And that was your lesson in science.  My father’s science/math-based family will be so proud. 

    Our first night in the apartment was Sunday, so no stores were open.  We ate at the oldest restaurant in Italy—Tre Re—Three Kings.  Good food, but you know what it is like to be truly embarrassed when all the people you eat with are ugly Americans who don’t know how to respect a new culture or shut up and not ask the same questions over and over again.  The people we ate with that night have become most of our favorites on the trip.  Kevin and I want to get a “meal exchange” program working between apartments so we’re not cooking every night. 

    I’ll write more about it later, but our city is very quiet and picturesque.  Being here is like walking through a postcard.  Our doors outside are giant-like outside and tiny inside, and the windows are small, and usually shuttered.  If you are going to school at Capital, or any other university that has quiet hours, consider yourselves lucky: here in Italy, quiet hours are a national law that could get you kicked out of housing, out in jail, or if you are on a visa, thrown out of the country, even after only one violation.  Italians do not have large gatherings in their homes in the cities.  They go for long walks and meet friends in the evening.  Dinner rush is around 8:30/9pm, so from the time the shops close (7:30, usually) until dinner, you’ll find most everyone walking around the piazzas. (Squares) of town.

    We live in il centre (downtown) in the renaissance part of the city, inside the walls of the city, and very close to the medieval center of town, San Pellegrino.  One of the biggest walking areas of the city because we are close to one of the main festival piazzas, and fountains, which were at one point, the only running water in the city.  In fact, there was a battle over a nearby fountain when a cardinal asked some servant boys to wash his dog, and the boys washed the dog in the fountain.  It was the only drinking water for the entire neighborhood.  Many of the neighborhoods and areas of town are named after the churches or fountains you find there.

    I am currently struggling through my Italian language class because it is so close to Spanish, which I took in high school and retained fairly well.  Hmm… what else to tell you all… my Culture prof moved here in the 1960s, and she’s an interesting lady.  She is a complete contrast to my language professor, who is in her early 30s, and could be a bikini model or something.  The boys are all basically in love with her.  I say all, but wthere are only 6 men on the trip. We’re trying to get her hooked up with our program director.  Maybe our director (a native of Turino) will understand why Viterbo is nicknamed “the City of beautiful fountains and beautiful women,” when he meets our instructor.  They would be an adorable couple.  There is only one year of age difference between them.  Leave it to me to play matchmaker in a foreign country.

    Anyway, now you know that I am alive.  I have experienced a little bit of culture shock, and I still do not have everything I need for my classes.  I have a different packing list to give to the Office of International Education than what they suggested, because finding things like folders and notebooks in Viterbo is no small feat unless you have a car to drive out to the ipercoup, and then you would have to expect someone to speak enough English to tell you which of the 40 stores might possibly have the random object you are looking for.  I will head out.  I give my best to all of you.  Mom, don’t forget to water my plants!
    Ciao!

    posted on 01/19/06 by Doreen Jones
  26. Pictures/Comments

    This is just a quick post to let readers know that to post a comment or see any pictures I add, it is necessary to click on the title/subject of the post.  Happy New Year!
    posted on 01/02/06 by Doreen Jones
    1 comments
    Last comment on 02/02/06
  27. Merry (Belated) Christmas

    So, it took me about 80 tries on 2 different computers and 3 different web browsers, but I finally got myself logged in again.

    10 days and counting.

    There are items packed away in my suitcase, and my mother and I are pouring over our list of last minute "to do"s.  I have already had 3 not so lovely vaccinations, and when I come home, I less than look forward to another 2.  I have had lots of doctor appointments (dentist, eye doctor, etc).  I forget about all the little things.  Thank God for Moms!

    Post Office stuffs, Banking, Ordering Euros, packing... I have had little time for other things.  I think the only thing I've done on my personal "to do" list is clean my room--what fun!

    I spent Christmas with my fiance's family, which made it the first major holiday I endured without seeing my family (things I will have to get used to).  The next big holiday I will miss will be Easter, while I am in Italy.  Does the Easter Bunny come to Italy? Just kidding.  Although, my parents are still cute and give my brother and me chocolate at Easter. 

    So far, the most frustrating part of studying abroad has been the packing.  In many European countries, I am told, the native people change their clothes with less frequency than Americans, and it is seen as pretentious if you have too many outfits.  Limiting my bags will be a good thing, and I do not have too many clothes to begin with.  The clothes are actually the easy part, though.  I am having a hard time not packing toiletries.  The office said to purchase your toilletries after arriving in the host country.  I am the kind of girl that has everything (and I mean everything) in my purse, and I like being prepared.  In high school, my friends called me "The Walking CVS."  Anytime someone needed a tissue or an ibprofen, they asked me because my bookbag greatly resembled my purse: it had everything in it.  I do not want to look for shampoo my first week in a foreign country.  How do they say "deep conditioning" in Italian anyway?  One of Kevin's friends had a suitcase turn up missing when she went to Malta last spring, so even if I pack my own shampoo and such things, it might take a week or two to get my suitcase back if it gets lost.

    So... 10 days and I'm talking to you?!  I'd best get my tushie in gear!

    Ciao!
    ~Doreen~

    posted on 12/27/05 by Doreen Jones
  28. Pre-Departure Excitement

    About two months ago, the Director of the Office of International Education approached me about blogging for Capital's new webpage when I study abroad next semester.  Today, I got my link, and I am excited to begin keeping my online journal.

    I have been overwhelmed from the typical "end of semester" stresses, but I find myself not counting down to Finals Week, to Winter Break, or to Christmas.  I am actually counting down to my flight to Italy.  For the record, I have 29 days including today until I am on a plane over the Atlantic.  I am not a big fan of airplanes, but for a chance to go to Italy, I will happily climb aboard. 

    Even with all of the excitement, I am a little nervous.  What I am worried about the most is learning the language and trying to fit in.  Americans have a bad reputation abroad for being impolite and loud, and I do not want to perpetuate that stereotype.  I will be travelling to a smaller town, that I imagine is about the size of Lancaster, Ohio.  Lancaster is close to my hometown, and envisioning Viterbo as a Mideavil version of Lancaster puts my mind (at least a little bit) at ease.

    Another strange worry I have is about what to pack.  We have a list, and the program says to pack light, but I am a shoe-aholic.  "Pack light" means 5-7 pairs of shoes to me, and I could find an outfit for each of them.  According to my mother, I am limited to 3 pairs packed, one pair on my feet.  With four pairs of shoes for 4 months abroad, I will be tempted to purchase some fine Italian leather footwear... maybe mom should do me a favor and forget about limiting my shoes so I don't come home with 10 new pairs! 

    More updates to come!
    ~Doreen~

    posted on 12/09/05 by Doreen Jones
Capital University
1 College and Main, Columbus, OH 43209-2394
614-236-6011
Jennifer Adams
Director
Capital University
International Education
1 College and Main
Columbus, OH
43209-2394
614-236-6170