Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Thanksgiving and Christmas Markets


Last Friday, I went to my first Weihnachtsmarkt. :)
It was in Mettmann, and it was exactly how I hoped it would be. Lights, decorations, and the smell of toasted almonds. I thought I was going alone, but I ran into a few of my friends in front of the stage and  spent the night dancing, singing, and enjoying the fact that Christmas has already begun here in good ol' Germany. Pictures are at the bottom. This weekend I'm going to one in Dusseldorf with my friend that I met while she was on her exchange year in America. Everything here has been fairly Christmas-y for a while, but now? Even my school has Christmas decorations! Germany is perfect. It's already pretty cold, but hopefully that means we'll have snow on Christmas. :) In all seriousness, it is so cold that I get brainfreeze from walking outside. I need a full-on-all-over-face-hat, and Miriam agrees. They say it'll get a lot colder and I'm debating hibernation. But hey, at least it's pretty!
Sunday was the first day of Advent. You know, like advent calendars with little doors and chocolate inside? Well apparently it's not JUST a countdown to Christmas. I'm still sort of confused on it, but I know that we have these daily presents that were brought to us by the "Christkind" and we open one every morning until Christmas. I'm actually gonna stop writing about this so that I can make a "German Christmas traditions" post. Sunday was also Thanksgiving for my family. Thanksgiving isn't a holiday here (obviously) so we didn't get out of school, so no one had time to cook all day on Thanksgiving day. Therefore, we figured we'd just move the date and call it German Thanksgiving. I found out that pecans are an exotic nut in Germany and are impossible to find, and fresh cranberries are also nowhere to be seen. BUT. My host dad is brilliant, and he grabbed some dried cranberries and told me that if I left them in water to boil, they'd come back to life. And whaddayaknow, once again, a father who is right. :) I used them to make my own cranberry sauce, and I also made my own stuffing from scratch. Oh, and my first ever turkey to cook on my own? About 15 pounds. Still amazed that I managed to cook this stuff without burning the house down! I will admit, my pumpkin soup did over boil and spill all over the stove top, but who cares. Big picture, y'all. It went so well, and I wouldn't have wanted it any other way. 
Thanksgiving day itself was a mix of bad and good. Of course it brought on some homesickness and whatnot, but I also almost got hit by a careless driver and got lost walking home after going down the wrong street. On the bright side, during a break in art class, a friend came over and hugged me to make me feel better. I'm telling you, you can not understand the impact of one single hug on a day like Thanksgiving until you spend a week feeling alone in a foreign country and start to get a little homesick. It really does make a difference in your attitude. After getting home, I was so upset because of the almost accident, and then Miriam came out of the kitchen. "I have a present for you so you don't have to feel so homesick. There's no Thanksgiving things here but..." she says, as she pulls a candy cane from behind her back. I'm still amazed I managed not to cry right then and there over just how sweet of her that was. In all honesty, I could have let that day be a wave of awful emotions and a swell excuse to get wrapped up in homesickness, but there were also positive parts, people who reached out to me- I chose to focus on that. 
I am so thankful to have thoughtful people in my life that care this much. A gesture as simple as giving a candy cane, it absolutely made my day. I can't imagine my year with any other family, and I wouldn't want to. <3
That's enough for tonight. Sorry I don't post as often as planned, I'm a bum. 


Weihnachtsmarkt:
Thanksgiving:
And as I mentioned on Facebook, I'm trying out this whole vlog dealio. Link is below. Brendan, I left the end part in just so you could point and laugh at my stupidity. :) 
PS. Brendan is coming to visit later this month, so subscribe to my YouTube channel that the video is posted on to see our reunion in Germany!

Linklinklinkliiiiink>>> http://youtu.be/dptuv94jgm8
If for some reason, that link doesn't work, here's the one to my channel>> http://www.youtube.com/channel/UC842QUCtz6QNEaFrdaEqTXA





3 comments:

  1. Uuuuummmmmm Gluhwein, do the still have frozen bananas

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  2. Get away from that gluhwein tent! I'm so happy that you are getting to experience the Xmas markets, I loved them!

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  3. Hallo Zoë !

    Mettmann is the area where the first neanderthal-bones were found.
    There is a museum near the original site. Have you been there already?

    Have fun, beware of the Glühwein :)
    Enjoy your stay...

    RoBo

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