Tuesday, December 30, 2008

The World I Leave Behind...

OMGOSH!!  Two weeks!!  It's happening!

Here is a speech I found posted on Emma's site.  It's from the Fall 2001 voyage about entering back into the country after the voyage.  It's quite interesting, so I thought I'd post if for you who would like to read it.  Enjoy!

Professor Robert Fessler, end of the Fall 2001 Voyage: 

"You're going home. No you're not. At least...not to the home that you left in January. When you get off the ship in Miami, you are going to know that. You already know it in your head, but when you get off the ship in Miami, you are going to know it in your bones. You are going to feel it in your skin. The world that you left behind isn't there any more.

There's a story that I like to tell my students about a fish in a fishbowl. There is a way in which a fish swimming around in a fishbowl knows nothing at all about water...because water is so much a part of the fish's life. It is surrounded by water...it is embedded in water. In that sense, the fish does not really KNOW water. If you want the fish to really understand water, you have to take the fish out of the fishbowl and say, "Look, that's water". Now if you put the fish back in...the water doesn't look the same any more. Well, in a certain sense, we've all been taken out of our fishbowls. You've been out of your fishbowl for three and a half months. Now you have to go back. It may not happen to you immediately. Caught up in the excitement of seeing your friends and your relatives...it may take a day. Maybe a week. But sooner or later there is going to be a moment. It might happen to you at the airport. It might happen to you in your hotel room. Maybe not until you get home. But sooner or later there is going to be a moment when you realize that the world just doesn't "fit" the way it fit before.

Many of your friends...even your good friends...are going to seem suddenly...strangely...stupid. You will want to talk about...India. And they will say, "Yeah, right. That sounds great". And somehow, that is just not going to be enough. And you'll say, "Yes, but I was in Chennai...let me tell you... the smells...the colors...and the babies... Let me tell you about the babies!". And your friends will say, "Uh huh." And you will watch their eyes glaze over as they smile and nod and glance over your shoulder. So you will try Japan. "You know, I was in Japan! I was in Japan right after the September 11, 2001, tragedy, and people comforted me, after we had bombed them years before. Can you believe that? I was in Japan!" And your friends will say, "Oh".And then your friends will suddenly get enthusiastic again as they begin to tell you all the things you missed while you were away. Like that big party...where everybody threw up on each other. And that really funny episode of Ally McBeal. And they will start telling you some of the lines...and laughing as they are telling them to you. And you will be crawling out of your skin.

And you will say, "But I saw beggars! I saw children begging! Did know that parents sometimes actually maim their kids to make them better beggars?". And your friends will say, "Awesome". And you will know that they don't get it. In fact, you might even begin to wonder if some of your friends really know what it means for something to be...awesome. Seeing a sunset while walking along a beach in the Seychelles Islands... that's awesome. Watching the ship crash through the great waves and have splashes of white and blue...that's awesome. Seeing the Great Wall zigzag off across the mountains into the mist...that's awesome. That big party you missed... isn't.

And you are going to hear yourself sounding pretentious. You won't FEEL pretentious, but you are going to hear yourself SOUNDING pretentious. You know, here on the ship, if you are sitting around with one of your friends or your roommate and you start a sentence like, "One night in Ho Chi Minh I was taking a cyclo back from the War Atrocities Museum....". That doesn't sound odd...here. But can't you just see your friends back home rolling their eyes? You are going to have to choose between sounding pretentious...and being silent. An you are going to long to be back here with us...where you can be normal.

And maybe you have a relationship back there. An important one. One that seemed really comfortable and promising...back in September. Oh boy! All those letters you wrote? Or didn't write? Some of them maybe feeling a little forced as you wrote them? Tht relationship might not feel right any more. Like an old pair of jeans that's all broken in, but out of style. And you think, "I just can't wear this any more."

Many of you have become independent on this voyage. Much more genuinely concerned about the world. About other people. Stronger. Braver. BETTER than you were in September. And the life that you had planned for yourself may not be big enough any more. You might be thinking about changing directions. A new major. A new career. Maybe even a new country. Who are you going to talk to? How are they going to understand?There are a thousand litle ways that the world is just not going to fit any more. And a thousand little reminders that it doesn't fit. WORDS are not going to seem the same. You will hear the word, "Havana City". Havana City is a place now...it's no longer just a word. Vancouver. It all comes back. It's not just a word. How could you posibly have imagined, back in September, that you would spend the rest of your life smiling whenever you heard the phrase, "plate tectonics"?

The world is never going to be the same again.So what do you do? Well, I think one of the things that you have to do is to forgive your friends. Looking at your pictures...listening to your stories...is not the same as having been th ere. You know that. You've looked at people's vacation pictures before. You know that pictures can't capture the experience. They are going to be looking at it and listening to it...you've lived it. It has changed you ...it hasn't changed them. So you have to be a little patient with them. You have to be a little forgiving if they don't quite get it.

But I think that you can only do that if they are willing to let you be the person you have become. It is not the places you have been to...and it is not the things that you have done that have to be shared. It is who you have become that has to be shared. You don't have to find people who have been around the world to understand you, but you have to find people to understand you. And if your old friends won't let you be the person you have become...get rid of them. Make new friends.

There are plenty of people out there. And I'll give you a good suggestion. You know those foreign students on your campus? Those strange people with the accents? You see them wandering around confused and not knowing what building to go into. Been there. Done that. Go talk to them.There are a lot of people out there who can confirm who you are ...and who you are becoming. Even if that is not clear to you now. In many ways, the person you will be six months from now is still brewing ...still developing right outside of consciousness. You don't know yet how much you have changed. And you won't know that for another six months or a year.

Other people who have been up here have suggested that you might want to try action. Find a cause...something that you believe in... and work for it. I agree with that. I think that's a good idea. But I am not worried about you. I don't think that you need to be urged to do that...you don't even need to be reminded to do that. I think you are going to HAVE to do that in order to feel at home. If the world does not fit any more, then you have to create a world for yourself that does fit...a place where you can feel at home.

I have been on this trip before...and gone home. So has Les... and Elaine...and Milt [academic deans]. We have all been taken out of our fishbowls and put back in again. And I think I can speak for all of them when I say ...come on in, the water's fine."



Two weeks!!

~Emily

Saturday, December 20, 2008

1 MONTH TILL SAILING!!!

I can't believe there is only one more month till SAS.  It has been my dream to go on Semester at Sea since the fifth grade and my dream is now only one month away!!!   I'm sitting here in Iowa in the middle of a 4-day long blizzard and I just remind myself that in one month I will be in the Bahamas and go on this amazing trip, skipping the winter this year! Woot!  I'm still working on my site, I hope to get a music player and calendar going up pretty soon.  

Also, I just received notification of the pre-sale trips that I was confirmed into!!!  I don't have the paper with me because I am writing this blog from ISU.  My dad and I are picking Meaghan up to go back home, and of course she isn't packed yet.  The blizzard warnings don't seem to faze her though.  Let me see if I can remember.  I think some were....

  • Cadiz city orientation ---  Spain
  • Flamenco Dance/Bull fight show ---  Spain
  • Taj Mahal/Varanasi 4-day overnight tour ---  India
  • Bangkok overnight tour ---  Thailand
  • Peking University 4-day overnight tour ---  China


I think that's it for the pre-sale ones.  My bigger ones I wanted were involved in Italy and Egypt, but were not going there anymore... :(   
The other field trips for the trip, we have to sign up for those while we are on the ship.  I hope I get into some more good ones. And the pre-sale ones for the new countries happen Jan 6-10.  I'll find out what I'm going on right before I board I think, and then people can trade and sell if they want.  

I'm so excited!! I was thinking about packing today.  I have no idea how I'm gonna do it haha.  It should be fun though.  I can only bring one bag there so it will be tough packing everything for four months, all clothes, school supplies, toiletries, electrical things such as computer and camera stuff plus backup memory cards and chargers, random things like laundry detergent, rope, and I don't even know what.  UGH!!

1 month!!!!  :)

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

My first blog!

Hello!

Welcome to my blog! My name is Emily Nelson and this is my blog dedicated to the recording of my travels on Semester at Sea, Spring 2009.  

          I've got everything paid up, secure cabin, my classes picked, field trips planned etc. and I'm so ready to go!  I first heard about Semester at Sea when I was in middle school.  I saw a commercial for the program on T.V and was like "I have to go on that!!"  I love traveling and always knew I wanted to study abroad but I wasn't sure if it was possible with my major and schedule and such.  Graduation was coming up and if you're going to go abroad the best time to do it and cheapest perhaps is when you are a student cause your financial aid will go to it.  (Not Clarke College and Semester at Sea though, boo!)  Anyways, while trying to decide what I wanted to do, I found my self unable to just pick one place and in the back of my head was SAS the whole time.  I decided if I'm gonna go study abroad I'm gonna do the one I really want to do because it's a once in a lifetime opportunity! I can always come back and visit one country or work or volunteer in another for a long time.  But this was a ship! (I can play Titanic and sleep under the stars which I LOVE!) and it sails AROUND the world literally circumnavigating the globe! And I don't have to pick one country.  It travels to like 12 different ones!! Talk about the adventure of a lifetime!! (Which is the SAS tag-line I believe).  

OUR ITINERARY:


  • Nassau, Bahamas
  • Cadiz, Spain
  • Casablanca, Morocco
  • Walvis Bay, Namibia
  • Cape Town, South Africa
  • Port Louis, Mauritius
  • Chennai, India
  • Laem Chabang (Bangkok), Thailand
  • Ho Chi Minh City, Viet Nam
  • Hong Kong / Shanghai, China
  • Kobe / Yokohama, Japan
  • Honolulu, Hawaii
  • Puerto Quetzal, Guatemala 
    (Antigua, Guatemala City)
  • Transiting of Panama Canal
  • Fort Lauderdale, Florida


  •          We we're originally traveling to Italy, Turkey and Egypt which I was soooo excited about ESPECIALLY Egypt!! That was the country I really really wanted to go to, but because of Pirate attacks the U.S. Department of Security and SAS decide to avoid the gulf of Aden and bypass it, leading us down and around the southern coast of Africa.  I'm so disappointed about not seeing the pyramids. But Hopefully I'll get there someday.  I'm excited for Africa! And to see the wild animals in their NATURAL environment, that should be amazing! 

              Later I'll post a more detailed one with dates and times on them.  I haven't even gone on the trip, but I know for a fact that it's going to be the best time of my life and a life-changing experience.  Semester at Sea is one of the best study abroad programs out there that I would recommend to everyone! You won't regret it, it's worth everything!  

    Hello world, here I come!!   I CAN'T WAIT!! 

              Visit semesteratsea.org for more information on the ship, the program, my trip and how you can take part in your own adventure around the world on a Semester at Sea!!


    Be back later, loves!
    Em