Friday, October 18, 2013

Moments on the Map

In reflecting on how much life I've lived in my first three weeks of grad school classes, I realize that a blog entry detailing each and every memory will easily turn into a short(ish) novella. Therefore, I introduce a new blog series! (That's right, we're getting official with series and the like on here, y'all.)


1. Loughton - East 15
I can't even begin to wrap my head around the moments, ideas, et al. this place has already given me. For one, having a worldwide cohort provides amazingly unique learning opportunities. My classmates from Norway, South Korea, South Africa, Belgium, and Egypt (just to name a few) widen my views daily in the best ways.

Who's my favorite classmate, you ask? I don't play favorites! Jk, I totally do. Her name's JoJo the Roommate, also known as the best 1 a.m. dance partner ever.

"1st day of school, we're nerdy excited!"

"1st week is over, let's go party!"
"Jk, we're exhausted. Let's watch YouTube videos."
We're in class from 9 to 6 Monday through Friday which can be slightly...exhausting? Exhausting, but in the best possible way. Sometimes there's no better feeling than being bone tired from a day of doing what you love, amirite?


2. Shakespeare's Globe Theatre - A Midsummer Night's Dream
On Wednesday night of our first week we booked it into the city to stand in the groundling line at the Globe for their production of Midsummer. Luckily we got right up next to the stage and had this view:


What's a groundling, you ask? What makes the Globe so important and nifty? Click here to read up a little on its history! What made the experience even MORE exciting was the fact that next time we're back at the Globe, we'll be on stage! We have a residency there in November/December that will end in a Saturday performance of two different Shakespeare shows.

Midsummer was ridiculously great. Puck and Bottom were completely fresh interpretations and Oberon was some kind of man beast I'd never seen.




3. Institute of Contemporary Art - screening of Lebanon Emotion as part of BFI's London Film Festival
Ben, one of my fellow classmates, starred in a movie that was screened at the British Film Institute's annual London Film Festival. What a privilege to get to support your peer at this experience! Plus, the film was really well done. Ben's work was fantastic of course (and I'm not just saying that, y'all).



4. St. James Theatre - Scenes from a Marriage
Unfortunately my phone died this night, but JoJo and I got some great TKTS tickets for this show last minute and loved it. It's a devastating, but completely engrossing performance. The trailer:



5. All Souls Church
On a rec from the states and the fact of it being right off the Central line, I decided to make All Souls my first church visit. It's a completely different experience for me to be in a house of worship with such a rich history in itself. (Click here to read up a little on it.) During the first service, I met a guy from the Bahamas, two men from Ghana, and an Indian couple. We sang in French and the message focused on missions to Europe. Needless to say- wonderful experience.


6. Stratford City - Westfield Shopping Centre
This is the nearest mall to us and is super conveniently located on the Central Line as well. It's one of the largest shopping areas in Europe and is located right next to Olympic village. Whether it's to go get a charger for my mac or an actual winter coat, I'm all over this place. Let's be honest- it just reminds me of 'merica.


Olympic athlete-signed cups at Starbucks

So that's just a bit of what my last three weeks have been comprised of! I hope you liked these first moments on the map. Am I forgetting to blog about something important? Do you have questions that I have very clearly missed answering? Lemme know, y'all. It's casual.

To the many blessings I'm experiencing daily,



Saturday, October 5, 2013

The Beginning of a Beautiful Friendship

My first two weeks in this city have flown by. There's so much to say. I guess I'm still in the honeymoon phase here, but I'm in love so far. Can a place give you butterflies and make you smile for no particular reason? (Answer: of course it can, hello Disney World.)

As well as my blog, I'm also documenting this journey via a twitter, tumblr, instagram and YouTube channel. Feel free to follow/subscribe/like/reblog/retweet/thumbs up/favorite/comment on all of those things if you'd like. Or don't. My friendship and love is not dependent on it.

My first London adventure vlog was also about my first "project" as a grad student:


Our quote for the day. Man, was it a good one.


Scenes from the Tate Modern.

My lovely group representing the UK, USA, Spain, Italy, and Taiwan!
After our great day in the city, JoJo, Katie, and I bought some last minute tickets to see The Light Princess at the National. Tori Amos wrote the music and lyrics for this new work which is still in previews. It has its problems, but was a visually stunning show with some seriously fantastic melodies.



A few days later, some of us ventured to the Churchill War Rooms which were unreal. I can't recommend the place enough. In case you're unfamiliar, the secret headquarters of the British war effort during WWII was basically a small community built totally underground. Men and women lived, worked, and survived down there.


Further photographic highlights (you can click on pictures to make them bigger if need be):


In case you were wondering, it's extremely difficult to be named an Honorary US Citizen. On the right is a casual letter from Dwight Eisenhower basically saying how much he misses his British friend.

Did you know Churchill was a legit painter? I sure as heck didn't.

The main map from the map room. This thing was punctured with thousands of tiny holes that denoted every friendly and enemy ship, battle, station, etc there was.


The man is responsible for enough quotes to fill a dozen coffee table books.

On the left is the flag that was draped across Churchill's casket which over 300,000 people filed past. His was the first "commoner" funeral attended by any ruler of England (in this case Queen Elizabeth).

Long story short- if you get the chance to go- GO! As an American, it will widen your view of WWII in really good and important ways.


All of these above things happened before my first day of classes. Since then I've completed my first week of grad school, seen two more West End shows, found a church, and slept far too little. But these events deserve their own post, don't you think?

To the city that gives me goosebumps,