Right now it is difficult to believe that I am on the African continent. Despite the stress of my time in
I arrived in
I tried to put my anxiety and exhaustion aside to join the rest of the group for dinner (most people had already been in
We spent a pretty long time there because there seemed to be no regard for serving everyone at the table together. My food didn’t even arrive until the rest of my table was done eating. I guess there’s a bit of
Oh, I haven’t even mentioned the house. Maybe I shouldn’t; it might make you all jealous! Robin and I are sharing a room on the second floor with a view overlooking
So let me get back to what we’ve been doing. After Rafiki’s I put on like 4 layers of clothes and 3 blankets and fell into a comma. My family is used to seeing this since I always complain of our house being too cold. In a sense I actually like the fact that it is so cold in this house; it reminds me of home. I only wish I brought more warm clothes. I don’t think I took it very seriously when I was told it would be cold. But it is. Cold and rainy. I can’t wait for a clear day so I can actually see the top of
Friday morning we all went to UCT to register and have a security briefing. We all managed to take horrible ID pictures, but I think mine takes the cake. Somehow I gained at least 30 pounds in the picture and the color of my skin matched the white background. I love it. Then Pablo and I got left behind after getting our IDs and of course it irritated Dr. Bender. Oops. The whole campus was gorgeous though, and it was kind of nice to walk around a bit without a huge group of people who obviously looked like tourists. We checked out the library and then rushed off to the embassy for yet another security briefing. It reminded me a lot of the “Scare you Straight” programs you see on TV about juveniles in jail. We were pretty much told not to go anywhere or do anything, I suppose so that we will find some middle ground and not go anywhere or do anything alone. But honestly, I wouldn’t go anywhere alone anyway because I know I’d get lost.
After that we went to dinner at the Waterfront at a jazz club. Dinner was paid for by our program, which was good because this place had the most expensive menu I’ve seen yet. The whole group, including Professor Bender, got up and danced while we waited what seemed like hours for our food. It already felt like our group was beginning to gel. I think we already have jokes about almost everyone on the program. Alison gets the most though. Somehow she ended up packing enough button-down shirts to last three months. She thought she needed to have work attire, while the rest of us plan on wearing t-shirts and jeans. We’ve already decided on having a “dress like Alison day” where we will all wear her clothes. For me the joke is that “the Jillian never dies” because no matter what strange illness I’ve had, I somehow won’t die. We all know that if anyone gets deathly sick here it will be me. We’ve also decided that if anyone goes sailing, I will somehow be attacked by a shark and/or contract a rare disease from a shark, probably both.
And now I am up to today, Saturday. Today I realized that I am definitely going to love
I didn’t expect much out of the tour as I have always thought that wine tastes like facial astringent. I hoped I would enjoy the wine here so that when I go home I can finally be more of an adult and drink wine with my family at dinner instead of water. I am such a child when it comes to my palate. But today I grew up. We toured the wine cellar and then sat for a presentation by the owner of the vineyard about the history of his wine and of wine in general. Dad, you would have loved it. We tasted pretty generous glasses of 6 different wines and I really enjoyed 5 of them. The only one I didn’t like was the red. And here’s where the title of this post becomes relevant, because I volunteered to go in front of the crowd and open a bottle of champagne with a sword as the French used to do years ago. I apparently would get knighted if I did this, so I of course thought it was a sweet deal. I was also told I would get a kiss, but the owner was a 62-year-old man with frighteningly wiry and gravity-defiant eyebrows, so I thought the kiss had to be a joke. But South Africans are not shy, and I was definitely kissed on the lips by this boisterous old man. I squirmed and blushed and tried to turn him my cheek, but he won out in the end. He kissed a girl less than a third his age. The whole experience brought out “modest lian” (as I’ve come to be known by some) at her very best. The rest of the tasting I spent flushed and giggling as I looked at the dozens of photographs that my fellow students of course took of my big moment. I’m sure I’ll be detagging pictures online soon enough.
So after the drinking was finished, we all got up to realize that after a breakfast of toast and cereal and a few glasses of the 22% alcohol dessert wine, we were all pretty tipsy. None of us were prepared for this at noon and it was a pretty hilarious site. None of us boast a high tolerance for alcohol, and some on the trip had never had a drink before today. Those were the really funny ones. We all marveled at the fact that our program had just paid to get us intoxicated. We are almost all underage in
After everyone stocked up on the wine they had tried we headed downtown for lunch, also on the program. I could definitely stay in orientation week forever if it meant my meals would be covered. We all planned on coming back to Franschooek once we heard that the Pierre Jourdan we had just tried was known as the best champagne in the country. That, and you could buy it cheaper there than at any retail store. What a brilliant business scheme this man is working, he charges you a little money to have a tour and taste his wine, and when he gets you tipsy, he leads you to the store to spend all your money on his wine. It was all very well executed. I think our house has more bottles of Pierre Jourdan than people. It’s going to be difficult for some of us when we go home to the states and we cannot have a glass of wine at a restaurant. I am starting to see how it goes well with food. Mom and Dad, maybe you can work on getting me a fake ID while I’m here. That’d be great.
Okay, I’ve probably stressed out my parents enough with this post. So it’s time to stop writing and go to the grocery store to buy food for dinner. Mom, I want to make that cherry tomato sauce tonight. Cooking here is going to make me wish I had learned more from you this summer.
Love to everyone, and I’m sorry for not answering many emails. Blogging is pretty time consuming. And therefore, it’s pretty expensive. I’ll try to write again soon.
2 comments:
Oh, Jillian! What a couple of weeks you've had. Even though I read your posts about moving in and the one about CT, it's still so hard for me to fathom what that must have been like. I'm glad you are safely in CT. And I'm very glad you were/are there for the St Lucia kids. Even though it was unbelievable trying and frustrating, I know that you are truly in the kids' corner. So don't be too hard on yourself about anything you feel you did or didn't do satisfactorily. I love you and can't wait to hear from you!
Hi Jill, I'm very happy that you survived your wine tasting and are happily settled in your dorm for the semester. College work will be a restful experience after St. Lucia, I'm sure.You did good work there for the kids. Love, Grandma
PS: Want any recipes?
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