My first few days in Spain were full of culture shock and hapless gaijin blunders, but that’s half of what made them fun!
My study abroad program, Michigan-Cornell-Penn in Seville, put us up for the first week in a hotel smack-dab in the center of Seville, the perfect setup for us all to blindly explore. Everyone in the program wandered about together those first few days, in between program meetings and the beginnings of our month-long orientation classes (a culture class and a Spanish grammar class). Along the way, I learned a few things:
- How to look like total tourists
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| Chelsea & Callie demonstrate |
- How to meet people
- How to score a 100% on spanish grammar homework
Well, that’s easy. Ask the locals! As for how to do that, see above. When I say Callie talks to anyone and everyone, I’m including random Spanish passersby. We would sit in a cafe at a table in the shade outside, poring over lists of idioms and subjunctive verb conjugations, and when we couldn’t answer a problem Callie would flag down a woman walking her dog, or a small group of teenagers laughing down the street, or an old couple taking a stroll. “Disculpa, do you have a moment? We’re doing some Spanish grammar homework and we’re stuck!” Our newfound friends were always a little confused at first by this question out of the blue, but they always loved the brief puzzle that was our grammar homework. For the most part, they were right of course, and when they continued on their way, it was always with a smile. And once or twice, they were as stumped as we were.
- How to pay a restaurant/cafe bill
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| One little cafe of many |
- How to buy a go-phone (HINT: do not use The Phone House)
- How to miss class
It rains in Seville less that it rains in the California Sierras in the summer, but I picked the one day it rained to run around like a headless chicken. We had a meeting in the hotel, and I knew it was in the hotel, but when I went downstairs and saw not a single soul from the program, I thought I was mistaken and the meeting was in the program center. So, I dash out into the rain and go for a wet jog; ten minutes later I arrive at the program center. It’s closed. Fantastic! Another ten minutes later I slosh back in to the hotel lobby. The concierge is giving me some strange looks as I wring my hands and my clothes. If it’s not at the hotel, and not at the program center...but I could have sworn it was at the hotel... aha! Epiphany! The reunion is in one of those clandestine business meeting rooms hotels have tucked away, and I completely forgot. Suffice to say, it was a little embarrassing to squelch into the room 30 minutes late.
- How to identify a restaurant for tourists
It’s easy, really: they’re the ones that advertise, in big letters out front, that they sell sangria. Some are more subtle; you don’t find out until they hand you the fully English menu (since we apply most of the techniques in “how to look like total tourists”, this happens a lot), or the waiter arrives and asks where you are from in heavily accented English. Admittedly, both of these are sometimes helpful: although we all speak quite good Spanish, things like “eggplant” and “cod” aren’t exactly in our vocabulary yet. What’s more, here in the Spanish south the Andalucíans talk with a bizarre accent, dropping the last syllable of a lot of words, missing S’s, and skipping over D’s, and it tends to throw us newbies off. So when the waiter receives blank stares after telling us all something, it’s helpful when he or she can drop a few terms in English to clarify what was said.
All in all, the semester ahead is looking like a fun one. With any luck I’ll be a seasoned veteran by the time December rolls around, forgetting my D’s and S’s with the best of them.


guten post!
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