Monday, 7 October 2013

Meine erste Woche in Deutschland – My first week in Germany


After spending a week in Germany it seems that it is high time to actually start my blog, and begin as I intend to go on. Despite my wish to make this as witty and nonconformist as possible, I am inevitably going to begin where it started, not so much Norwich bus station at 5am, but rather the idea of my departure. Departures are usually synonymous with loss, whatever form they might take. Having arrived in Bonn as the sole Bristol student taking up an Erasmus place at the Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität it is easy to understand this. For a start, my first excursion to a supermarket was a melancholic affair due to the lack of cheddar being sold (and the consequential dread of a year of cheese-deprivation induced calcium deficiency). But despite the initial realisation of the culinary limitations of my new home, it has certainly become clear that departure might actually mean something entirely different. That is to say, arrival.  So rather than thinking about all that I’ve left behind, my friends, comfort, and blocks of mature cheddar, I’m going to focus on the things I’ve gained in my first week abroad and the promise of what lies ahead.
Good friends will know that I’m starting with what is most important i.e. a pair of roller blades. After arriving and meeting one of my new housemates – a German computer scientist who goes by the name of Volker – I quickly became overwhelmed by the hospitable nature of my new home, and excited at my apparent possession of some wheel-embellished shoes. I am living in a WG, which is kind of a flat, but also kind of not. It is a flat building where tenants drop in and out all of the time. Some WGs are just quite places to stay, but Rosenstrasse has more of a quirky, homely fee (as epitomised by the vase full of kinder egg toys on the communal bookshelf). From the moment I arrived it was clear that I got lucky with this place. Overlooking the perfection that is my room, my arrival here has been unreal, beginning with my housemate taking me round town, giving me some rollerblades that had been left in the WG, and facilitating a trip to the Seibengebirge (nearby mountain/hill type things). After a suitably tiring walk up the Drachanfels peak, I was presented with a view of the Rhine with Bonn merging into Cologne in the valley below. I can’t express how it felt to see my new home sprawled out along the Rhine, but all I can say is that there was tranquillity about it I’ve never really felt before. What a way to begin, kudos to you Volker.
And since the initial success of acquiring roller blades (which I had always dreamed of owning to skate down the Rhine) my departure has continued to be about my arrival. Since being here I have met some lovely people also on the Erasmus course (and been joined by a good friend from home), sat on the Rhine’s river beach at night, marvelled at the Cologne cathedral and so much more that I can’t even remember. What’s more, the loss of cheddar pales in comparison to the additional foodstuffs I have encountered, with good bread and Federweisser being among the most notable additions to my diet. So I have not only gained many new experiences, but also some weight I am guessing. Don’t be surprised if I come home obese…
So on the eve of the commencement of my new university life, I sit in my room writing to an audience back at home where everyone I love is, and rather than feeling daunted of what is to come, I'm glad that I persevered and allowed myself that initial loss of comfort for the trade-off of the arrival at some place new and different. I am trying to keep this short enough that it isn't boring or a chore to read, but simultaneously I don’t want my point to be overlooked. So if you want to know more, check out my Facebook for future blogposts and photos, and I’ll leave you with an anecdote from a good friend of mine: Adele once told me that one goodbye is another hello, and she was right. So to conclude, hello Bonn, I'm ready and waiting.





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