For the most part I still live the life of a normal student.
I have a roommate, I go to class and spend some time in the library (although
not that much). I even had a short period of time two weeks ago where I really
truly felt like I was a student at school in the U.S. It was a Thursday night
and I stayed up pretty late finishing a lab report that was due the next day. I
was in a time crunch and I had to sit myself down and get it done. This is the only
time so far that I have had this experience in New Zealand. Then, of course, the next
morning someone in my apartment building set the fire
alarm off at 7a.m. I felt like I was living in a freshman dorm all over again. All
those familiar aspects of school and life back in the U.S were completely erased by 11 am
that morning, when I left campus in search of my rental wetsuit (aka my official New Zealand uniform) so I could go
white water rafting the next day. Then I spent the afternoon with a friend strolling through a
suburb of Auckland, buying honey and going into book stores. Not a typical day for a US college student, but another typical New Zealand day for me.
I have my struggles though, being in a new city and in a new
country. The grocery store is the main one, my nemesis! I have been here for about 5 weeks
now and I still get completely overwhelmed, and never really find what I
am looking. I admit, it’s not even like they speak a different language here, and I never expected what should be a simple task to be so difficult. Another struggle I have
has nothing to do with Auckland, but the damn dryer in our apartment just cannot dry clothes. I have been
doing laundry all day because it takes about 200 minutes for clothes to dry.
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160 twice for the possibility of dry clothes |
I am also dealing with what I like to call “big school syndrome”. I never realized how good I had it at Wake Forest, until I tried to accomplish the simplest of tasks here at the University of Auckland, like printing. Everything is spread out between fifty million offices and people, that you can never quite seem to find. So if any of my Wake friends are reading this, stop and think about what some people deal with at big schools, because when you think it is taking forever to get something accomplished or it is being done the hard way, I can assure you it’s not! I love the change-up for the semester, and it has allowed me to fully appreciate what I have at a smaller university.
Even though I keep some of the normality of being a student,
my life here is so different and I love it! I am taking trips or exploring almost
every weekend. I was feeling homesick on Friday, all my friends were headed
back to Wake, or to where they will study abroad, and my Facebook page was rolling by with posts. I quickly got over it the next day though,when I went cave tubing to see the glow worms. I also get to participate in an
awesome internship as part of my schooling. The people I work with are amazing
and brilliant and I am so lucky to work with them. While I had a moment, missing my friends and my "normal" world, I wouldn't trade this experience for anything!