Hola! I know after all this time you'll be expecting a spring break entry, but I'm afraid that's not what you're going to get today.
I can't believe it's been almost a month since I last blogged, but here is the reason why: as a type A person, I can't stand to have things out of order and since I haven't blogged about spring break yet, every time I think, "I should blog about this!" I fret about it being out of order.
But! This way I'm not going to have any memories of these last two weeks recorded, and that's a shame. So, I promise that some day a spring break entry will come (a girl I went with recorded EVERYTHING and she's going to make me an outline to go off of so I don't forget any main points :)) but today I'm going to tell you about the random things I've done since I've gotten back.
The week we got back, our host family did everything in their power to show us that they had missed us. We told them about our trips and they told us stories, Teresa made yummy food, she washed all our clothes right away and anticipated anything we could possibly need so it was done before we even realized we needed it, they called us "mis niñas" and "mis hijas." It was so so sweet and it was very clear that we were loved and missed in the house. I am going to miss them so much.
Upon coming home, it was like a giant family reunion, not just with Teresa and Leondro, but with our whole program! Everyone was so happy to see each other and catch up on everyone's trips and hang out with each other. It was amazing to see how everyone's trips were so perfect for each of them, and a blessing to see that everyone had been kept safe and was still friends with everyone they traveled with and those they didn't ;)
That Wednesday, I went with two other girls on a spontaneous day trip to Trujillo, one of the pueblos mejor conocidos de Cáceres. A kid in our program's host mom teaches English there and she offered to take us, so we went up there for a couple of hours and checked out mostly the old part of town and then sat and drank coffee and ate pastries in the plaza mayor while we studied for an exam we had the next day. It was a relaxing way to check out a place we had been told we should see! Here are some pics:
Orange cake with chocolate. Yuummmmmmm.
So yeah! That was an adventure. The next day, I aced my exam woot! haha So maybe it was good luck to have a fun day the day before :)
Unfortunately, the following evening I was pretty sick-I had to cancel everything, including skype dates (sorry Abbie & Kelly) and my parents blamed it on Trujillo, which it absolutely wasn't, but it could have been all the changes in weather (it keeps going from really hot to really cold) in addition to fatigue from spring break etc. I was basically lazy for the rest of the week.
On Saturday, our parents took us to Coria, where their other house is! We were going to go for the whole weekend, but because it looked like it was going to rain all weekend (which is kiiiind of on and off did, but it was mostly just gloomy) we decided to only go for a day. It was really sweet, we drove up there and they pointed out lots of things on the way. When we got there, we got a tour of their "house" (like if you turned a house into an apartment, but it had three floors!)
and then we went on a walk with Teresa. She bought bread and traditional cookies of Coria for us to try (yum, I've never had anything like them) and then we walked around the city and saw their church, the old part and the castle, the cathedral, and the museum-where is kept what is supposedly the table cloth that was used by Jesus and his disciples at the last supper. Leondro met up with us halfway and took us up a tower and walked around with us some.
The wall around the old city
The cathedral!
Inside the cathedral-so beautiful
The last supper table cloth
The castle.
A view of the city from the tower
I think Coria must be an aging town, because when you enter the old part, plastered on the doors are notices of who has died recently, and everyone stops to look at them. And whenever we ran into anyone Teresa knew, the first thing she asked was who had died. They ended up going to a funeral that night before we left.
Then Teresa made us a delicious lunch of some kind of tuna pasta thing. Afterwards, she asked us if we wanted to watch tv with Leondro. We went into the sitting room where there was some kind of heater. I sat in a chair with my feet in front of the heater and fell asleep immediately, where I stayed for the next two hours! When I woke up, Hannah and I read while they were at the funeral. When they returned, she made us tea from "hierba buena" in her garden (I think it's just mint?) and then we walked around the city once more, under a sky threatening to rain any moment, until we met Leondro at the river where he was waiting with the car to take us home. It was a lovely day trip :)
We were verrrry lazy for the rest of the weekend, but I think it was a rest well-deserved.
This week we've tried to be less lazy because it is starting to hit us that this semester is coming to a close. Two weeks from right now I will have already been home for over 8 hours! I can't believe it. If I am completely honest with you, I go back and forth between being very ready and very very sad.
In phonetics this week we watched a strange movie called Una Casa de Locos, and it's about the ERASMUS program (I think I've mentioned it before, it's the continent-wide European study abroad program). Our teacher Marisa assured us that we were going to love it, find it hysterical, and completely identify with it. I don't think many of us found those things to be true, although it was entertaining in a strange sort of way. I think everyone would agree that we identify more with these two videos, which you can feel free to watch or ignore, but I find them hilariously accurate.
Except, of course, I'm not drunk all the time. But still, amusing.
School's been pretending to be real and stuff lately, so I've actually had a decent amount of homework, exams, essays etc, but I've decided that I'm going to enjoy these last two weeks to the fullest so I haven't gotten overwhelmed and am just taking it slowly.
On Tuesday Marisa decided to "have class" at the Gran Cafe with churros and coffee and then surprised us at the end by paying for all of us. It was so nice and a wonderful way to spend time together speaking in Spanish. I think it was there, watching my classmates converse and laugh with each other and our teacher, that I realized how little time we have left here together and it made me sad about leaving, whereas I had been so homesick during the weekend, because...
Oh! I can't believe I forgot! That Friday before we went to Coria was Teresa's birthday! Hannah and I had each gotten her little gifts from different countries while we were traveling over break, which made her really happy, and then that night the WHOLE family came over for dinner-both her daughters and her daughter's families. It was craaaziness! Lots of loud fast Spanish talking and intensely Spanish food. It was quite the experience. At the end, Leondro brought in a metal bowl that he lit on fire! It was some kind of alcohol, sugar, coffee mix that he let burn for about 5 minutes, ladling it out of the bowl so the fire would rise and fall. It was ... an experience! Quite the experience. After he blew it out (Heather style! Mom, Dad, and Dawson will know what that means), we each (except for the little kids, of course) got a little bit of it. It was sweet and firy. Indescribable, really, but interesting. The bowl of fire. Anyway, I think that having the family all there together reminded me of our family reunion last summer and it made me miss my own family. Families are special and I'm excited to see mine soon :)
Also on Tuesday, a friend and I went up the mountain for a lovely relaxing afternoon. It was very windy, but possibly one of the few nice days we have left, as it's been gloomy so far for the rest of this week and the forecast doesn't look too good.
When I got home, Teresa had surprises for us! Albondigas and arroz con leche. Yum! This week, I asked her if I could have some of her recipes so that I can cook Spanish style at home. She was more than happy to dictate them to me, but I'm afraid my notes are very sketchy, filled with measurements like "a dinner glass of this, and a breakfast mug of that" and ingredients in Spanish that I will have to google translate, but I hope I'll be able to recreate a few of them :)
If you aren't keeping up with Spanish politics (haha), you may be interested to hear that the king went elephant hunting during this crisis, and while in Africa, fell and broke his hip. The country was in uproar that they didn't know that he was there! (Side note, did you know the king killed his older brother who was meant to be king when he was about 14 years old? The entire country accepts that it was an accident though...) Also, the Spanish national gasoline company Repsol bought out a failing Argentinian company YPF a few years back, and this week, the Argentinian president declared that Argentina now owns YPF again. Just declared it. I really don't understand how she could do that, but apparently she can, and Spain is furious. So yeah, that's what's going on here right now.
On Wednesday I had an interview and was selected to be part of the ISU STARS program in the fall, which gives the campus tours to prospective students, so that's exciting. I also did some job/internship hunting and concluded that I need more skillz with computers, so I'm taking a computer science class over the summer. It was also registration day for honors seminars, so I'll be taking a class on the logic of paradoxes in the fall, which I'm really excited about. So Wednesday was a good day.
And then yesterday, I only had one class, after which Hannah and I walked back from the University and spent the morning in a cafe doing homework. In the afternoon, we hung out with some friends and went out for margaritas in the evening. Tonight, we're going to The Hunger Games! Today is it's first day in the theater in Cáceres, so we get to enjoy it ... in Spanish of course :) I'm quite excited.
Coming up, we have a four day weekend this weekend, because Monday is the day of San Jorge, the patron saint of Cáceres so everyone has off (that's weird, but cool), and Sunday night they have a huge party where they burn a dragon in the plaza to remember San Jorge? I don't know, but it should be fun. This is our second to last weekend, so those who are here are living it up Cáceres style :)
So that's been my life since spring break! Crazy as always, but full of blessings.
Praises to God for:
-safety over break
-the sweet welcome we received home
-good friends
-good family
-good food
-endless opportunities
-love and laughter
-that I have almost two more weeks to enjoy here
-my temporary home in Cáceres
Love to you all, thanks for sticking with me <3 Hablamos pronto!





















TA! Tú host familia es divino - me encanta la foto con ellos :) que rápido que pasa el tiempo, no?!! Me alegro que has escrito de tus últimas semanas y ojalá que disfrutas de los dos que vienen! Un beso grande desde iowa
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