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Dublin, Ireland

a travel blog by kmr788


Remember back in elementary and middle school when each new school year seemed to begin with the same assignment: Write an essay entitled "How I Spent My Summer Vacation." I had some pretty good ones in there over the years- trips to Disney World and Las Vegas, Colorado and Hawaii. So how am I spending THIS summer vacation? 8 weeks in Ireland! Sounds like the makings of a great essay already!

The downside to spending 8 weeks in Europe (aside from missing my 21st birthday at home with my friends and family) is that communication is going to be tough. I'm not quite sure what I'll do not being able to pick up the phone and call home five times a day to talk about whatever random thought has popped into my mind...

Luckily the 21st century has answered this problem for me! Over my summer I'll be using this website to keep everyone updated on what amazing experiences I encounter while abroad- Be sure to check in every few days to read my latest blogs and see all the pictures I hope to post!

Miss you all... see you in late July!! Muah oxox
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I always want to be where I know I can't go.

Malahide, Ireland


We started off the day with class from 10a-1p where we had a quiz- it was pretty basic and I got a ten out of ten on it! Then we took the Dart (the local train) north to Malahide to spend some time in their town there. We went on a walk to a local castle there that was beautiful. On the way to the castle though we got a little distracted by a playground we found! Yes, a playgound! And it was seriously the coolest one ever! Hehe. It had a HUGE slide and this really cool contraption thing where you sit on a little disc and slide along a cable. It probably sounds weird but was so cool! Hehe.

The park was great- it was as though we had all suddenly turned five years old again! We were all joking around that here we were, a bunch of twenty year olds, on their way to a castle but getting distracted by a park instead!

It was fun though to just fool around for a little bit and pretend to be a kid again… Do you remember that guy David who I met at Doyle’s one of our first nights out? Well while I was talking to him that night he mentioned that he had been in Florida and had gone to Disney World. I told him that Disney World was pretty much my favorite place in the world and he asked me why. “Because it’s the only place where you can be five years old again!” I told him. And he asked me why I wanted to be five again. Because life was so simple back then, wasn’t it? He told me he wouldn’t want to be five again, that he liked where he was now- he had a job he loved, owns his own house, life is good. Maybe he’s right; maybe I wouldn’t really want to be five again… there are defiantly a few upsides to being older. But still, every once in a while, it really is nice to get to feel like a kid again!

Well we finally did turn back into grown ups and we made out way to the castle.

It really was beautiful! I wish we’d been able to take a look inside but it was all closed up for the day.

We made our way into town after that to grab some dinner at one of the local pubs then took a walk down by the beach. It was a bit of an overcast day though so it almost seemed more depressing than it should have been. We were walking along and we saw this little strip of land on the other side of the water and Lindsay looked at it and said she wanted to go there. “I always want to go where I know I can’t,” she said. I think that’s part of the human condition though, I told her. And then I said, “What a great name for a blog!” hehe- so that explains this blog’s title!

Tomorrow we’re heading to Galway for a two-day trip that I’m uber-excited about. The only downside is that the bus leaves at 7am so we have to leave the apartment by 6! Oy, I think the only thing that’s making us all feel better is the thought of sleeping on the bus! Well since I have to be up early tomorrow I guess I’ll cut this blog short!



permalink written by  kmr788 on June 12, 2009 from Malahide, Ireland
from the travel blog: Dublin, Ireland
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Stag who?! Stagdoo!

Killarney, Ireland


I’ll break this past weekend up into two blogs. This one will focus on Saturday.

Throughout the summer there are three school-sponsored trips that you can go on that will take you throughout Ireland. One to the North, West, and South (and then we live in the east!) The problem is they’re 200 Euro each and my friends and I knew we could do the same thing but cheaper! So that’s what we decided to do!

This past weekend we booked a tour to Galway, which mean being downtown by seven in the morning so we had a pretty early start! It wasn’t too bad though because I went to bed relatively early (around midnight maybe) so I got a few hours of sleep. Plus I think what helped was knowing we’d be able to sleep on the bus.

Our bus driver was great! And he told some great, funny stories throughout the day that kept us laughing. One of the first places we went on our tour was The Burren,

which is an area with a bunch of limestone covering the landscape. We spent some time there and was able to get some great pictures. It was a bit tough walking in places because the rocks didn’t exactly make for a stable surface. Of course, Ellie was our adventurer (as always) and took the pic out on the protruding rock… the rest of us worried it would fall!

At some point in the day we switched bus drivers and moved onto a smaller bus for the overnight portion of the trip. Here we picked up a new bus driver and were now on a small bus with only about seven other people (plus the seven from our own group).

Although the bus felt a little cramped at first because we’d just moved from a much bigger bus, I actually liked this one better. It was really nice being in such a small group and it allowed us to meet the other people too.

After switching buses we headed to the Cliffs of Moher, which were absolutely amazing!

There were two ways you could climb up to look out at the Cliffs and Amy and I went to the left while most others went to the right- to the right were lotttsss of stairs that I wasn’t willing to trust my asthma on!

I suppose technically you weren’t supposed to go to the left but everyone did anyway. Really they should just pave it and make it safer for us since they know we’re going to go that way anyway. Instead we actually had to climb over a mini-wall and walk on some unsteady surfaces to be get to a point where we could look out at the ocean.

The whole while I was up there all I could think was how beautiful it was… and how much my dad and grandma would have hated it! We were sooo far up and when you look over the edge it’s just a straight shot down to the rocky waters. Dad might have been able to make it took look out a bit, but I’m not sure Gran-mi-ma would have made it as far up as we did!

We headed to our hostel after visiting the Cliffs of Moher, which for a hostel actually wasn’t too bad. It was in the town of Killarney, which was a pretty small town with most of the main pubs and shops on just one little road. Five of us were able to stay together in one room at the hostel and then Kelsey and Lindsay staying in a different room with three other people from the tour. The only downside was that their hot water wasn’t working so they could only put it on for an hour at night and an hour in the morning. Which mean very cold showers! Us smart ones just decided to shower when we got home the next day- but Meghan and Jahna braved the cold water and we could literally hear them screaming the whole while they showered! No thanks!

That night the fourteen of us from the tour met at a local pub for dinner, along with our bus driver. It was nice because the tour we used (Paddywagon Tours) goes there often so we actually got a deal on our drinks! Always a plus! After dinner then our driver took us to another local pub to hear traditional Irish music and then at 11 a live band came on.

This second pub was actually a lot of fun. We also wound up running into three (!) different bachelor parties! We love our bachelor parties because it’s a whole group of guys out looking to have fun… it meshes well with our whole group of girls out looking to have fun! Hehe. Oh but I forgot, here they’re not called bachelor parties they’re called “Stagdoos” because the bachelor is a “stag.” We learned that from our first stagdoo way back in our first week- remember that? Oh, good times!

While we were there Kelsie caught the eye of someone but was having a bit of trouble breaking the ice! He’d come over to talk to us for a bit but then the conversation sort of broke off. So when I saw him and his friend were up at the bar I pulled Kelsie up there to get them talking. It turns out I’m actually a pretty good wingman, hehe! I got the conversation going and then sort of passed him off to Kelsie so they could talk as I talked to his friend. He turned out to be Scottish and though he was adorable, there was something about his accent that actually made him less cute to me when he talked! Haha…. I guess I prefer those Irish accents. Anyway, he turned out to be not so exciting after we actually talked to him so we moved on to other people throughout the night… though I did get a free drink out of them!

I spent the rest of the night with Meghan talking to a guy named Shane; he was also with a stagdoo! We had a good time but at one point he said he had to ask my age, even though you’re never supposed to ask a woman that, and I think he was a little unnerved to find that I was only twenty-one… he was twenty-nine. Oh well.

I actually wound up having to leave the pub early because I went to the bathroom at some point and when I came back Meghan was somehow about to punch the “stag” from the party, who had been bothering her all night. I didn’t want to leave because I was still having fun talking to Shane but you gotta put your girls before your boys, ya know? So I got her the heck out of there and we headed back to the hostel a bit before everyone else.

The bed was the most uncomfortable thing in the world… but by the time I hit it at past 2am- and with too many drinks and shots in me to name- it basically felt like the best thing in the world!



permalink written by  kmr788 on June 15, 2009 from Killarney, Ireland
from the travel blog: Dublin, Ireland
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A Waterfall, Two Rocks, and a Stone

Cork, Ireland


Finishing up my blog about this weekend…

I should probably note that things never really go according to plan for us, which meant we never did actually make it to Galway! Haha. It turns out the tour we booked went to Cork instead of Galway (though I still say they had it listed wrong on their website!) In the end it didn’t really matter since Cork was also a place we wanted to visit at some point… plus this mean we got to kiss the Blarney Stone! I guess you should be worried- now that I officially have the “gift of gab” this blog could go on forever!!

Well we woke up the next morning completely awake and refreshed! Okay, that’s a lie. Let me rephrase. Well we woke up the next morning to a freaking bright room all suffering from too much sleep and a major hangover! Yes, that’s more accurate. I did actually have to wake up around 4am though to let the rest of the group in because we only had one key to the hostel’s main door, which Meghan and I had taken when we headed home early. So the girls called my cell phone and after about the third ring it finally woke me up and I very sleepily made my way down the stairs to let them in. The more I though about it I was kind of annoyed that we had to leave the pub early the night before. But I knew if I had been in Meghan’s position I would have appreciated someone leaving early with me, so in the end I know it was the right thing to do. And lord knows there will be other nights out in the pub!

So that was my first hangover of the trip so I guess I should at least be proud that I was able to go that long without getting one. It really wasn’t too bad, just a bit of a headache. And once I was able to get a bit more sleep on the bus I felt much better!

We visited a couple different places yesterday- the first was a waterfall in Killarney, which was beautiful!

There was a stairway by it that we assumed would bring us closer to the waterfall, I only made it about halfway though before I had to turn around because the stairs really suck for my asthma! Ellie, Lindsay, and Kelsie continued on though but they never made it to the top either.

After the waterfall we had about an hour and a half drive to Cork, which was a perfect time for us to grab a nap and really hammer out that hangover! At Cork we visited Blarney Castle where we got to kiss the Blarney Stone! Yes ladies and gents that means exactly what you’re currently terrified of- I now officially have the gift of gab!!

Just in case we weren’t sure I had it before! Actually, I even kissed the stone TWICE so I guess that means I have double the gab. I kissed I the first time and my friends missed taking a picture so the guy felt bad and had me kiss it again. The pic wasn’t taken on my camera though so I still have to track it down.

For those of you that don’t know, kissing the stone is a bit of a feat in itself.

In order to reach the stone you have to lay down on your back, then put you hands behind your head and grab onto a railing as you literally lean off the side of the castle to kiss the stone. Luckily they have someone there holding you as you do all this. It really sounds and looks scarier than it is! Still though I saw a number of people that chickened out once they got up there!

After the stone we had some time to grab lunch in town so we went to a little café and all got breakfast. Most of the group got the traditional Irish breakfast but I went for some traditional pancakes and eggs instead… sooo good!

We actually had pretty good weather for most of the trip, and although the rain came down pretty good at times it always happened to be when we were in the bus travelling to our next destination, so all in all we were pretty lucky!

After Cork we made our way back to Dublin and were supposed to stop at two rocks along the way (see, we already hit the waterfall and the stone, now it was time for the two rocks). We stopped at the side of the road to get a picture of the Rock of Cashel, which is where the kings of Munster County sat for hundreds of years.

We all had to laugh because when the driver said we were stopping at the Rock of Cashel we all thought it was an actual rock instead of a castle! We were supposed to stop at one other ‘rock’ too but we were running a bit behind schedule so we skipped stopping there. So I guess in the end the day consisted of a waterfall, a rock, and a stone.

Even though we’d only been gone for one night it felt like we had been gone for days (!) and it felt great to get into my comfortable bed! I went to bed about nine and so I was able to get lots of rest after our great weekend!



permalink written by  kmr788 on June 16, 2009 from Cork, Ireland
from the travel blog: Dublin, Ireland
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(In an English Accent) "Is the building really on fire? Because that would be a shame."

Dublin, Ireland


Well my second week of the internship has come and gone and I think it was probably a bit better than last week. We had to do a bit less if archiving this week, which was nice! Monday we did some archiving in the morning and then Nigel worked with us a bit on how the Museum recorded all the specimens given to the collection and what not. I found it all really interesting. Right now I know so little about museum work and museum curation that I’m really just open to learning about it all!

Twice while we were working with Nigel the Museum's fire alarms went off so we had to exit the building for obvious safety reasons. One of the times when we exited Alice came with us. Alice is this adorable women, probably mid-twenties, from England. She came to Ireland about a year and a half ago and is actually moving to CHICAGO at the end of the summer with her boyfriend who's going to be working at the planetarium. Anyway, were all standing outside and in her adorable accent Alice looks at the building and says: "Is the building really on fire? Because that would be a shame." Haha, too cute! Luckily the building wasn't on fire! but the alarms did take up about ten minutes each from our work day!

Tuesday was a lot of fun because Nigel took us to the museum at Collin’s Barracks for a meeting they were having there. About ten of the “bosses” got together to walk through the museum and look at the signage- what worked well, what was confusing, what was too wordy, what had too many colors. We spent over an hour just looking at the signage and only made it through two areas of the Museum. It was really nice though because they also asked Blair’s and mine opinion so we were really able to contribute to the meeting!

Blair was sick on Wednesday with strep throat so it was just me and Nigel for the day. We went back to Collin’s Barracks where they were hosting a school class that had one some kind of contest, which gave them a day in the museum. It was fun to get to see Nigel and some of the other people work with this group of ten year olds. I could really tell that Nigel had his own children and grandchildren because he worked with them so well. Matthew, the museum geologist, on the other hand was obvious that he didn’t often work with kids! Still though, he did a really good job with them. Katherine was also there and she’s the head of the Museum’s educational programs so obviously she worked great with them also!

It was funny because once I spoke they could obviously tell I wasn’t Irish. At lunch I saw a bunch of girls whispering around their table and then finally one of them came up to me and asked if was American. I said yes and she skittered back to her group where they whispered some more. Than another girl came up and asked where I was from. Once they realized I was open to asking questions about seven or eight of them came running up to me asking me all sorts of things. It was actually a lot of fun- they were so adorable!

We spent most of the conversation talking about the differences in our language. Such as the Irish calling it “toilets” while we call them “bathrooms.” The kids were really perceptive too and noticed things that I had missed. For instance, they always call stores “shops” while we often say “store” – I’m heading to the grocery store.

Our day ended around two-thirty and Nigel knew I had class that evening and normally left early anyway so instead of having me head back to the Natural History Museum for an hour and a half he just let me go home, which was really nice. This gave me some time to catch a nap- the only problem, however, was that I woke up from my wonderful nap with a wonderfully awful migraine!

Class was pretty brutal and I had to force myself to make it through the first half of class, which was the lecture portion. Luckily the second half was watching a movie and when Caroline (our lecturer) saw how sick I looked she told me to just go home and get some rest.

I was hoping to knock my headache out overnight but I woke up this morning to find it was still there! I forced myself to go to work but we were cataloguing all day and looking at a computer screen for hours on end wasn’t exactly conducive to getting rid of my migraine. I actually wound up leaving for the day around one and came home to nap. My headache’s probably a little bit better but I’m definitely not heading down to City Centre tonight! It’s just so annoying because obviously I don’t want to be cooped up inside when I’m here in freaking Ireland!!

I have class tomorrow morning but no internship, which is good. I’m hoping one more good night of sleep will be enough to knock this headache out for good so I can at least go out tomorrow night and enjoy my weekend! Here’s hopin’!



permalink written by  kmr788 on June 18, 2009 from Dublin, Ireland
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'Cause her hair was black and her eyes were blue, So I took her hand and I gave her a twirl, And I lost my heart to a Galway girl.

Galway, Ireland


This weekend we decided we wanted to head over to Galway since we never actually made it there last week. Our original plan was to rent a car and drive, mainly for the sheer adventure of it. Of course, no car company in their right mind would actually rent a car to a bunch of 21 year-old American tourists so we were forced to go with Plan B and take a bus instead. (Much less fun!!)

When we got there we took an hour bus tour of Galway- because the three hours we’d just spent on a bus from Dublin apparently wasn’t enough for us! Hehe.

The tour was okay but Galway isn’t that big to begin with so it’s not like there was a whole lot to see. We stopped at Galway Bay and got some coffee and then just saw some various sights throughout the city. Mainly cathedrals and a couple college campuses they have there.

Originally the reason we wanted to go to Galway this weekend was because we wanted to go to an event in Sligo this morning. Sligo is about two hours from Galway though so we really needed a car in order to get there- hence the real reason we wanted to drive. Apparently the Irish Cancer Society was having an event where they were trying to make a world record for the most women skinning dipping in the ocean! I think their goal was 300 and it was called “A Dip in The Nip.” So we were going to go to support that organization but like I said we didn’t really have a way to get there. Honestly, I was kind of glad! Because although I would have done it I was with four girls that basically disappear when they turn sideways so I’m definitely the “fluffy” one of the group and would have felt majorly self-conscious. But it would have made one hell of a story! Hehe.

Since we knew we wouldn’t be able to make it to Sligo this morning we figured there was really no reason to stay overnight in Galway because there wasn’t anything we were going to do there during the day today.

We found out the bus that runs to Dublin runs every hour starting at midnight so somehow we decided it would be better to just take a 3 or 4am bus home after we were done in Galway instead of wasting time and money on a hostel. This would have been a great plan if we had actually planned ahead… but as you may have guessed, very little planning went into this trip! So we got to Galway and decided we weren’t going to stay the night yet everyone had a duffel or backpack so that complicated things a bit. We grabbed some dinner and then went to a pub that we thought looked good and we were able to get a corner booth and stuff our bags back there.

It was still really early though at this point- only about 7pm. But we hung out there for a while and had some drinks and eventually the place got busier and we were able to mingle with some other people. We met one group that was there for their friend’s birthday and we talked to them for a while. Ellie and I talked mostly to Connor, who was the birthday boy, and his friend Kyle who was adorable. At some point in the night they left though and I joined Jahna in talking with this guy Paul.

Well Paul decided that he really wanted to go dancing and he wanted us to go to a nightclub with him (even though I repeatedly told him I don’t dance! Haha). Jahna and I kept trying to explain that we had all are bags so it wouldn’t really work. So he suggested putting our bags in his car while we went to the club. Okay, can you say shady!?

Well Jahna decides that’s a great idea but only if we can keep his car keys for the night to ensure the safety of our things! She’s a smart gal!

So the five of us that went to Galway put our stuff in Paul’s car and then went to a local nightclub- Central Park I think was the name, or “CP” as they called it. Haha. We actually had a pretty good time there and I even danced! Shocking, I know! I think as long as the place is dark, really crowded, and I’m with friends then I actually don’t mind dancing because I feel a little less self-conscious about it. I think it’s more when we’re just hanging out in a bar and there’s only a little bit of dancing going on where I feel really uncomfortable!

I’m constantly reminded while in Ireland what a small country it is. While we were at the nightclub we ran into the first group of guys from the other bar- the one with Connor and Kyle. This was cool at first because we’d had a good time at the first pub. But… have you ever had one of those moments where you think you really want something until you have it and then you realize it’s not what you wanted at all? That’s the moment I had last night. I was dancing with all my friends and we were having a great time, and then I started dancing with Kyle and realized that while he seemed really cool at the pub and I wanted to hang out with him more once I had that opportunity I realized it’s not what I wanted at all. Does that make sense?

Well anyway, we didn’t stay at the club very long and then we went to Paul’s car and got our stuff. He stayed at the club so we just got our stuff from his car and left the keys in the front seat for him! Haha. We had some time to grab some food then- greasy fast food is always the best when sobering up! Then we took a 3:45am bus back to Dublin.

The bus ride back was actually great, I basically fell asleep the minute I sat down and when I woke up it was suddenly three hours later and we were in Dublin. We caught a cab ride back home (the buses weren’t even running yet) and then I collapsed in my bed and got some more sleep. I could probably easily still be sleeping right now but I purposely made myself get up after a couple hours or I knew I wouldn’t be able to sleep tonight. I’m hoping I still will be able to!

Well for a weekend that basically had no pre-planning into it, it actually turned out to be a pretty great “day” trip to Galway. Before we left for Galway yesterday morning we were standing at the elevators with all our stuff and Kelsey just turns to everyone and says, “Guys, what are we even doing?!” We all had to laugh because we realized at that moment we really did have no concrete plan. But I guess sometimes those spur-of-the-moment decisions make for the best times!



permalink written by  kmr788 on June 21, 2009 from Galway, Ireland
from the travel blog: Dublin, Ireland
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Creepy Museum Stalker = Awesome! (but not really.)

Dublin, Ireland


Well the third week of my internship has come and gone and I’m very happy to report we’re finally getting past the archiving / correspondence portion of the programming! Blair and I were beginning to get a little frustrated with all the archiving we’ve done of old museum correspondence. Between us we’ve done something ridiculous like 1500 letters, whew! So we decided to sit down with our boss and talk about what the rest of our internship would entail and our concerns over having done so much archiving. While we both understand this is an important part of the job, we also both needed something a bit more educational for our internship experience.

So we talked with Nigel and now Blair and I are going to be heading up a type of focus group. Mainly we’re going to be going to the main Museum at Collins Barracks where we’re going to walk through it and see how ‘user-friendly’ it is, particularly in regards to signage and navigation.

We headed over there Wednesday and it was kind of cool because Blair walked through the whole museum trying to find all the different exhibits only asking people for directions and ignoring all signage. I, on the other hand, walked through the museum trying to navigate with only signage and a floor plan and wasn’t allowed to ask anyone for directions. This allowed us to assess how easy it would be for a map-illiterate person to walk through the museum versus the ease for someone who may not speak English and thus must go strictly off the map.

It was actually frustrating at times because I found there were some exhibits I couldn't easily find, and all the maps seemed to have incomplete data and contradict each other. At one point I was standing at a point where two walls meet and on each of the walls was a floor plan map and then I also had a floor plan in my hand- and all three of the maps said something different!

We later found out many of the map troubles- such as the floor plan and wall maps being different, and certain exhibits not being on the map at all- were due to lack of funds. I found out the floor plan I was using was over two years old! Which meant it didn’t have many of the recent exhibits the museum had opened.

So now it’s our job to try and figure out how the museum can make navigation easier when they don’t have the funds to do the easiest thing- which is print new maps! Next week we’re going to walk back through the museum and come up with a list of what we’re calling “cheap fixes.” Basically it will be simple things the museum can do to make navigation easier for its visitors. In some cases it’s as easy as printing out a laminated sign and posting it to the wall to give direction to an exhibit or whatnot.

Oh man, yesterday when we were walking through the museum I had a museum guard stalking me! Sooo creepy! I was on the third floor walking through the exhibits when I had this younger security guard come up to me and we had the oddest conversation as follows:

Him: Where are you from? (No hi or how are you- simply this blunt question!)
Me: America.
Him: What are you studying?
Me: History.
Him: What type of history?
Me: I don’t really have a focus yet, but mainly American history.
Him: Have you studied the Indians? (What is he talking about?!)
Me: Yes.

An awkward goodbye occurred and he went on his way. I continued walking through the third floor but ran into the same security guard in a different exhibit. So I’m walking past him to the doors to head to the next exhibit when he stops me…

Him: How long are you here for?
Me: Until the end of July. (At this point I’m trying to figure out why I keep answering truthfully!)
Him: That’s a long time. Are you studying here?
Me: Yes, at DCU.
Him: Oh. (Brief pause) I’m an artist (Okay, random!)

At this point I nod and smile and continue on my way. So I get into the hallway and breath a sigh of relief as I walk towards the next exhibit because at least now I know he’s behind me… or so I thought. I continue into the next exhibit and all of a sudden he’s standing in front of me! I honestly have no idea how he got there! I swear he should have still been in the room behind me… creepy! Once again he approaches me…

Him: I have a book launch here in July do you want to come? (What?)
Me: Um, when is it? (Why did I not just say ‘no’ and walk away?!)
Him: Sometime next month.
Me: Um, I don’t really know what I’ll be doing next month. It’s here?
Him: Yes, it’s at the museum. I’ll be here just come back.

I nod and smile, miss out on the rest of the exhibit and whatever else is on that floor, and then proceed to run down the stairs to the Café to meet Blair for lunch. And that is the story of my creepy museum stalker. I’m praying I don’t see him again while I’m working there these next few weeks- especially since I don’t want him to think I’m there to see him!!

We ended our week with the signage project I talked about above. The beginning of the week though we helped one of the museum workers (I can’t remember her name) catalogue… SPIDERS! Ick. Katie would have hated it! We had to open up their cases and lift up these huge, ugly spiders so we could put their information into the computer for later cataloguing. The woman asked if we would help her because she really hates spiders. I said they didn’t bother me as long as they were dead but once we got up there I realized those things were too creepy to deal with even if they had been dead for a hundred years!! Luckily Blair was less squeamish than me and she picked up any spiders that needed to be. The more we worked on them though the easier it was to deal with them. Still, all I could think about was how much my sister probably would’ve freaked out at them- Seriously, Katie, gross!

The beginning of the week was also a bit rough because I woke up Monday with a bad chest cold. Blair had strep throat last week so I’m really hoping I didn’t catch it from her! I went to the pharmacy though and got an over-the-counter decongestant to hopefully break up this cough before it gets too bad. Although I’d love to go out tonight I’m going to give myself one more night of rest and then I should be good for the weekend. I’m already feeling better from Monday so hopefully the meds I’ve been taking have been working!


permalink written by  kmr788 on June 25, 2009 from Dublin, Ireland
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Do you want to see my boa? ;-)

Dublin, Ireland


Friday night was tons of fun… Saturday morning, not so much!

Friday night I went out with Jahna and Meghan down to City Centre where we went to a bunch of bars. We started off at a place called Palace Bar that Jahna and Meghan go to ridiculously often and then went to some club that was filled with mainly all gay guys! Apparently this weekend was a bunch of gay pride parades and all the gay guys decided to go to this one club! Haha. Well Jahna decided to get a martini and we were sitting at the bar when this one very gay guy walked past us with a feather boa… Jahna looked at him and told him he looked fabulous (which he did)! So he proceeded to stop and buy us all drinks! We all did jaggerbombs and then talked for a bit. He gave me his feather boa too, which I was pretty stoked about! It’s the color of the Irish flag (Green, White, and Orange) and will be a great (free!) souvenir to bring home!

In order to get into that club you had to let them put two streaks of red face paint on your cheek. Whatev! We didn’t really care but then after the 'gay' club we went to another bar that looked cool and were told they were “too classy” a bar for face paint. Seriously?! A 'classy' Irish Pub- isn’t that an oxymoron!? But again, not a big deal, we just moved on to the next pub! Hehe

We wound up at the Stag’s Head but they were closed. Luckily, Jahna is our sweet talker and she got the bartenders to give us a bottle of beer. We stayed there for a bit and talked to the bartenders as they closed up, and they actually wound up giving us a couple of free beers so it worked out well!

On our way to the next pub we ran into two guys from America and one of them was from Chicago! It turns out he’s from the Barrington / Schaumburg area!! Small world!! We talked to them for a bit and then headed to Doyle’s to hang out there, plus I think Jahna wanted to dance a bit. Around this point Meghan had gone home and it was just Jahna and me. We wound up meeting two Irish girls there and went back to their apartment for a couple of drinks, which was a lot of fun. It’s amazing how friendly the Irish are! We hung out there for a bit and then finally got back to campus around 5am… yeah, it was a looong night! But so much fun… until the next morning that is!

I counted it up when I was talking with my mom and it turns out I had eleven (!) drinks Friday night… luckily I only paid for about three of them so little harm came to my wallet. But I woke up Saturday extremely sick! I’ll save you the gross details but in the words of my dad, I spent most of the morning ‘praying to the porcelain god.’

I assumed I was just hungover but at the same time found this odd because normally I can hold my liquor and rarely actually get sick from it! Plus I didn’t have any other hangover symptoms, like a headache or anything. It wasn’t until about 7pm last night when I was still feeling sick that I began to realize something must be wrong. I began to notice that my throat was hurting really bad, which again I had just put off to being hungover and sick. But once I looked in the mirror I realized I had strep throat! I went to a clinic that night, which only confirmed what I already knew!

Unfortunately the pharmacies were already closed so I had to wait until this morning to be able to go and get my meds. Of course if I had realized earlier in the day that I was sick and not hungover I probably could have caught it sooner… but oh well! I was just glad to know that I can still hold my liquor after all! ;-)

I’m going to take tomorrow off of work because I’m still contagious and don’t want to get any of my coworkers sick. Also I don’t want to push myself too hard and just make it worse, missing one day certainly won’t kill me! I was just glad that the strep came this weekend and not next weekend when I’ll be in Germany! Oh, have I mentioned that yet? I’m going to Munich, Germany next weekend, which should be TONS of funs!! I’ll make sure to take lots of pics and update my blog once I get back… Hopefully I’ll be feeling much better by then!

Still though being sick in a foreign country so far from home certainly isn't the greatest thing in the world! Whenever I'm sick it obviously just makes me miss my parents and family even more, especially my dad! You know when you get to that point of being sick where you should eat something or it's just going to make you more sick (about the point I'm at now) but you don't want to because it either hurts to eat (owie, my throat!) or you're afraid it will make you more sick? Well I don't know how he does it but whenever I get to this point my dad is the only person that can ever get me to eat something! It's like a talent, hehe. My mom will tell me over and over that I need to eat something or I'm just going to get more sick and I never listen because I'm too busy thinking about how sick I currently feel. But somehow my dad will start talking to me and before I know it I'm eating the scrambled eggs he's made for me. Yummy, scrambled eggs! Anytime I'm sick and away from home all I wish is that my dad was there to make me scrambled eggs! Or when I got my wisdom teeth pulled a few winters ago and I wouldn't eat anything- my dad made me mashed potatoes I think three times a day for a week! My dad makes the best mashed potatoes!!

Anyway, being out on my own means that being sick on my own is just one of the many things I have to manage through... Like I said, hopefully I'll be feeling much better soon! Until then, I'll just imagine the mashed potatoes I'm eating were made by my dad (even though I know if that were true they'd taste much better!)


permalink written by  kmr788 on June 28, 2009 from Dublin, Ireland
from the travel blog: Dublin, Ireland
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Hee'sss Baaccckk!

Dublin, Ireland


Alright, let’s see… what happened this week at the museum? I’m afraid nothing too interesting, honestly there’s probably little point in writing a blog about it at all but yet I’m writing one anyway… so bare with me!

I was actually home sick both Monday and Tuesday with freaking strep throat. Grrreeeaaatt! Unfortunatley I think what made it worse was that I probably waited too long to go to the doctor. Instead of just going last week when I first started getting sick I stupidly thought I could just get rid of it on my own with over-the-counter meds. Not exactly my brightest idea. So by the time I finally realized it was strep it was much worse than it normally is. This of course meant that the antibiotics seemed to take foorreevveer to start working!

By Tuesday I was feeling a little bit better but I worried that if I went to work I would push myself and just feel sicker the next day. So instead I gave myself another day of rest and watched “Pride and Prejudice” for about the billionth time… yeah, it was rough!

It was sooo annoying being sick though because here I am in beautiful Ireland, stuck inside with strep throat! And of course both Monday and Tuesday were gorgeous outside!! Plus by that point I’d really been cooped up inside since Saturday so I was actually pretty glad to get out of the house and make it to work Wednesday. The weather wasn’t as nice out yesterday but I wore a dress anyway- I’ll be damned if I’m gonna be stuck in jeans and a t-shirt my first day out in four days! Hehe.

After work on Wednesday I went to the pub with some coworkers because one of them was actually leaving the museum and it was her last day. I actually had a fun time and talked with Alice (the adorable English girl I may have mentioned before). She’s moving to Chicago at the end of October so I had a blast talking to her about that. We also actually got into a really good conversation too about Pearl Harbor, 9/11, and the London subway attacks too- random, I know. But it started with my discussing wanting to be a history teacher and my interest in WWII and somehow it just evolved into this really great discussion.

Today Blair and I went back to the museum at Collin’s Barracks to finish working on our signage project. Unfortunately my two-day absence has put us a bit behind so we’ll probably need to work on it next week as well. Luckily my boss is really understanding and was fine with it.

Here’s where it really started to suck though… remember my museum stalker? Well heee’sss baaaccckkk. Crap.

I had told Blair about him before and how he would just magically appear in front of me when I swore he was in a different part of the museum. She didn’t believe me until she saw it for herself! We were in one of the exhibits when he came up to me and exclaimed, “I’ve met you before!!” Yes, yes unfortunately he had. Luckily Blair realized he was my ‘stalker’ and she got me out of the situation pretty quickly. But then two seconds later we turned the corner and suddenly he was in front of us again! Finally Blair understood what I meant when I said he would come out of nowhere. We had to work the rest of the day to avoid him and luckily we were rather successful. Now I just have to hope I don’t see him again next week when we’re back at Collin’s Barracks!!

Well it’s getting late and I leave for GERAMNY tomorrow so I should end by update here! So excited to be heading to Munich. Though my sister brought up a great point when she reminded me I don’t like German food: “Kelly, you’re going to starve.” Crap. Well I’m sure I’ll be able to find something that I like… hopefully!

(Oh and can I just add… it’s JULY?!?! How the hell did that happen!?)


permalink written by  kmr788 on July 2, 2009 from Dublin, Ireland
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What the hell happened to my beer?!

Munich, Germany


I’ll do what I did a couple weekends ago and split my weekend into two blogs. This covers Friday.

We had to leave for the airport pretty early because our flight to Germany left around 9:30. We flew into a small town called Memmingen about an hour and a half outside of Munich. When we landed I think we all had the same obvious realization- ‘F! We don’t speak their language!’ Luckily enough people at the airport spoke English that we were able to find out the best way to Munich was a train and somehow me managed to get to the train station and get a ticket to Munich.

We were actually pretty excited because what we thought would be a thirty euro round-trip bus ticket turned into a fifteen euro round-trip train ticket! So we figured the trip was already off to a pretty good start!

Our good start went downhill, however, after we arrived in Munich and it was pouring rain. And I’m not just talking rain here; I’m talking crazy loud thunder and huge streaks of lightening with torrential downpour rain. Luckily we found another English speaking person and found our way to the tram that would get us to our hotel.

(After some of the girls at a bad hostel experience in London we decided to splurge and stay in a Holiday Inn instead- when split between the four of us it actually turned out to be cheaper than a hostel!!) We thought were doing dandy (yes, I just used the word dandy) until a nice young lady informed us we were going the wrong way on the tram. So we had to get off, in the torrential downpour mind you, to get back on the tram going the opposite way.

Finally we made it to our hotel and our first order of business was dinner! We ate at the hotel’s restaurant where we all ordered pizza. Yes, we flew thousands of miles to Germany to eat pizza- but it happened to be the menus cheapest and also sounded the yummiest! For dessert though we got Bavarian apple strudel, which was a.m.a.z.i.n.g. It made me laugh because whenever we go to the German restaurant in Disney World about the only ‘German food’ I like is their apple strudel! This actually turned out to be the only ‘German’ food I ate during the trip, not counting their soft-baked pretzels that seem to be very popular (though I’m not sure that actually counts as ‘German’ food, but yummy all the same!)

Given that we were not in the beer capital of the world it only seemed right to go out for the night and grab some drinks. While we still had a couple hours of daylight we decided to walk around the city. Oh my gosh- it. was. beautiful! I basically fell in love with it instantly and we had such a fun time walking around. We stopped at their City Hall, which was freaking beautiful. And also went to the Residential Palace and Museum (though we didn’t go inside either since they were probably closed for the night).

After walking around for a bit we ended up at Hofbräuhaus- a huge beer garden in the center of Munich. We got huge pints of beer (I think these are double pints actually) and had a great time just sitting around and talking for a couple hours. I should add that it took me ten minutes to finish my beer… it took the other girls about an hour and ten minutes. What can I say? I know how to drink my beer! And it definitely was some yummy beer! We also got one of their huge soft-baked pretzels to split between us!

After we finished our beer (though I had been done for quite some time) we decided to head back to the hotel because we had to be up early for a tour we were taking in the morning. On our way out two guys called us over to have a drink with them. We sort of ignored them since we figured there would be a language barrier but I stopped to ask if they spoke English. The one said he did a little and it turned out so did the other. The other girls weren’t sure what to do so finally I just made the executive decision that we were only in Munich for a couple days and should take advantage and we went and sat down with them. (I also knew the bar was closing so we couldn’t get another drink, which was good because I didn’t want one. Hehe, I know, I’m sneaky.)

It turned out they were from Austria and I forgot their names once they said them since I couldn’t even begin to pronounce them! We had a good time talking to them especially once we stopped being frustrated by them having their side conversations in German. We realized we were basically doing the same with our English since they couldn’t understand us when we talked fast to one another. It was amusing though because every once in a while we’d be talking and they’d have to stop and say, “Wait, how do you say [insert German word here> in English?” as they were trying to explain something to us.

In Germany they say Munich differently than we do- they spell it München and pronounce it completely different. That whole day we had been trying to figure out how they pronounce it. So I asked one of the guys how they pronounce ‘Munich’ and he looked at me and said, “What’s Munich?” I laughed and responded, “The city we’re in!” And he looked at me very confused. So finally I asked him what city we were in and he said “Oh! München!” and pronounced it the German way. “Okay, well we pronounce it Munich!” He got a big kick out of that and it was a pretty funny conversation all the way around!

After the beer garden closed the guys wanted to go out for aonther drink, which Kelsie and I were completely up for.

Unforunatley Lindsay and Amy were tired and wanted to head back to the hotel. Since we knew we had to be up early the next morning anyway Kelsie and I decided that was probably for the best and we all headed back together. We knew Saturday was going to be a long day…


permalink written by  kmr788 on July 5, 2009 from Munich, Germany
from the travel blog: Dublin, Ireland
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How many more are there we don't know about? ...how many more without a name?

Dachau, Germany


In March of 1933 in a small town in southern Germany named Dachau a man named Adolph Hitler opened what was termed a ‘concentration camp.’ Over the course of the next decade hundreds more of these camps would be opened across Europe with Dachau serving as the prototype and model for the others that followed…

Words can never express the depth of emotion I felt on Saturday morning when I took a trip to that small town in Germany, to that camp…

Amy, Lindsay, and Kelsie wanted to take a tour of some castle in the Alps (apparently it’s the one Walt Disney based his Sleeping Beauty castle off of). Although this sounded like fun we only had limited time in Munich and I didn’t fancy spending four hours on a train to go see some castle (it was two hours both ways just to get there and back!) Also, I was interested in visiting Dachau, especially given my background in history and particular interest in World War II.

Amy had found an all-English guided tour that brought us from the train station in Munich to Dachau and then gave us a guided tour of the camp- overall the tour was over five hours! Though it was only about a ten-minute train ride to Dachau and then another ten-minute bus ride. So the three other girls went to look at a castle and I went to see where Hitler’s “final solution” truly began.

In the days leading up to my tour I spent some time trying to mentally prepare myself for what I would see and feel once at the camp. As we took the short train ride to the camp I prepared myself for the rush of tears I was sure would come once I stepped foot in the camp… once the true emotion of what happened there hit me. Our tour guide immediately pointed out how the camp is just off the main road of Dachau- He posed the question, “Did the locals know the camp was here?” “Yes, they couldn’t have missed it.” But he also explained how well the Nazi propaganda had led the locals to believe it was something completely different from what it was. How the SS Soldiers had actually invited them to see the camp as they set up mach portrayals of the camp, basically using the prisoners as actors. Still I had to wonder- did these townspeople really not know what was going on there?

We walked the same road the prisoners walked to the camp’s entrance and already I could feel the emotion welling up inside of me. We stood outside the original building that is the entrance to the camp with the phrase “Arbeit Macht Frei” on the prison’s gates – translated literally in English as “Work Makes (one) Free.”

I expected to step through those gates and immediately burst into tears… but I didn’t. In fact though there were times when I cried some, there was never a point where I really bawled like I honestly expected to. At first I didn’t understand… How could this not affect me- am I that cold a person, why am I not crying?

And then I understood. Even as I stood there and saw what I saw, heard what I heard, understood as I understood- I could never fully comprehend the depth of what was before me, the depth of what had happened there. If I were to be able to fully comprehend it all, I never would have stopped crying…

We walked through the gates and entered the prison and I suddenly became very aware of the ground I was walking on… because I suddenly began to think of all the prisoners who had walked on that same ground.

The camp was originally built for a capacity of 4,000 – 5,000 political prisoners; by the time of its liberation it held over 40,000 prisoners of all types.

There were originally about thirty barracks but after liberation they were knocked down. When the camp became a memorial they rebuilt a set of barracks to show the visitors what they were like. They actually did a good job of showing the transformation of the camp from 1933 as a prison for political prisoners to the full-blown concentration camp it was by 1945. The barracks were set up so that each room represented a different period of the camp’s time.

The first room was set up to house about 50 men and they actually had quite a bit of space with a small “common area” of benches set up. By 1944 when the camp was liberated that same sized room now held over 500 men…

After the barracks we were taken to the prison cells in which there were about 140 in a row. Before heading into that building though we stopped in an alleyway type of space between what used to be the main building of the camp and the prison cells.

Here is where our tour guide talked about the executions and torture that occurred at the camp… he looked around at where we stood in this small space between the two buildings: “Here are where the executions and torture took place,” he said. And then he pointed to the wall behind us, the wall no one had even noticed before, the wall that was riddled with bullet holes. I thought I was going to be sick.

We walked through the prison and got to hear about some of the more “notable” prisoners they kept there. Among them were mainly priests and rabbis but also was a man who had tried to assassinate Hitler and other political prisoners. In some of the cells they had put paper over the window so that it was dark and they beamed a light on the wall with quotes from prisoners who had survived the camp… each more gut wrenching then the one before it.

After seeing the prison cells we watched a twenty-minute movie about the camp that basically relayed everything our tour guide had told us but this time with actual footage and pictures from the camp. In this darkened theater is where I cried for the first time. After the movie we took about a half hour to spend in the memorial’s museum, which was set up in what used to be the camp’s main building.

It was actually very emotional being at the camp on Fourth of July- obviously such a notable day back home in America. As our tour guide mentioned the camp’s liberation by U.S. troops, and as I read about it in the museum, I was never more proud to be an American. Yes, we were not the only ones fighting in the war. Yes, it was not solely us who made the liberation possible. But yes, it was American troops who walked through the camp’s gates in 1945 to bring liberation to the camp that had been open for twelve years. Standing in the museum, reading about the camp’s liberation and first-hand accounts from both the liberators and the prisoners being liberated, I began to cry again.

After visiting the museum our guide spent some time discussing the camp’s actual memorial.

The sculpture in the center is supposed to represent the twisted bodies of the dead, while the posts represent the prison’s walls. The two blocks of gravel in front of the memorial represent the place where the prisoners had to walk for roll call everyday- often so sick and hungry that simply walking to the location was a feat in itself. To the left of the memorial is a stone wall that holds the ashes of some of the prisoners who died at the camp- on the wall in five different languages reads the message: Never Again. The main theme throughout the entire memorial.

We then walked down the long road that used to house all the barracks to the back of the camp. The walk only took us three, maybe five minutes.

When we got to the end our tour guide had us turn around and look at the distance we had travelled. “Not long at all, right?” he said. “Now imagine walking that distance in the snow, the rain, the cold. Imagine walking starved from not eating properly for weeks, months, years. Imagine walking it sick, injured, dying.” I thought about it, I looked at that distance, I tried to imagine… and I cried once again.

At the end of the camp are four different memorials. One for the Catholics, one for the Jewish, one for the Russian Orthodox, and one for the Protestants.

The Protestant memorial captured me the most because the building held very few, if any, 90-degree angels. The architect specifically avoided them because he said the prisoners lived their lives in that “right angle” mentality. They had to do everything just so, had to take orders from the guards, had to live their lives in that strict pattern. So the architect avoided the ‘strict pattern’ of right angels.

Our tour guide showed us a re-creation done of the security measures on the camp.

He explained that if a prisoner even stepped foot on the grass they would immediately be shot dead with no questions asked. He then explained how many soldiers would purposely step onto the grass if only to end their own agony.

The last part of the tour was by far the hardest. We walked over a small bridge that went over a small stream of water and it was so peaceful you almost forgot where you were for a minute. Then you continued walking and you hit the sign: “Krematorium.” Right, I remember now.

We saw the old crematoriums first, the one’s held in a small shed that only had two.

The ones they used before they could no longer ‘keep up’ with the amount of bodies. Then we saw the long building that held the new crematoriums- the crematoriums that the prisoners themselves had to build. The crematoriums that sat right next to the newly built gas chambers, also built by the prisoners.

Our guide explained how the gas chambers worked- he showed us where the chemicals were put in and where the soldiers looked through to see if everyone had been killed.

He explained it all but what he could not explain was the questions that had been eating me up inside all morning- How could this happen?! How could the guards do this?! How was it not stopped sooner?! Our tour guide could not answer these questions… nobody can answer these questions. And so I entered the building with the most important questions forever unanswered.

I saw where the mechanics for the gas chambers were held. I saw the room where the prisoners waited to be brought in to the “showers” the guards claimed they were going to, and then I saw the gas chambers. I walked in to the small concrete room, with the ceilings so much lower than everywhere else, and I truly thought I was going to be sick. It’s a feeling I have never felt before, a feeling I can never describe, a feeling I prey I never feel again.

I walked to the next room, the room where the dead bodies were brought after being in the gas chamber. I walked past that to the ‘new’ crematoriums and then I walked to the final room where bodies were piled when there were too may to be burned. The sick feeling, though not as intense, came back.

Our tour guide explained that after liberating the camp the U.S. troops were so angry at the local townspeople for allowing this to happen that they brought them to the camp to see the bodies. During the film we saw the locals being brought into this same room where bodies were piled in the corners- the look of pure shock and horror as they left that room was a sight I will never forget. I feel as though every person who leaves that room has that same look in some very small way.

Dachau was liberated on April 29, 1945 by U.S. troops. A recorded 30,000 people died during the camps twelve-year existence. However the camp had been open for several years before deaths began to be recorded and many deaths were not considered “worth” reporting. For instance, no Jewish person killed was reported nor were many executions. The estimated total deaths are 40,000- many people go as high as 120,000. Some say a quarter million people died at Dachau- its very possible that number is not far off from the true total.

A few years ago they decided to dig up the mass graves that lay behind the camp in an effort to identify the bodies. Between the two mass graves there were nearly 7,500 bodies- only 200 could be identified.

As I left the concentration camp I knew that those five hours spent within its walls would leave me changed forever. I looked at the pictures I took and tried to think how I could use this experience in my future classrooms. I tired to think how I could explain my experience here, how I could make others understand and I realized I couldn’t because even I don’t understand. Even now I don’t believe the full depth of everything I saw and felt at the camp has hit me, I’m not sure it ever fully will or ever fully can.

I left the camp proud to be an American, proud of our soldiers who liberated the camp sixty-four years ago. I left the camp thinking of those 30,000, 41,000, 120,000, people we were too late to save.

I also left the camp ashamed, ashamed to be a world citizen who allowed such an atrocity to occur. I left the camp thinking of those 30,000, 41,000, 120,000, people we were too late to save and I prayed it would never happen again. Then I thought of the atrocities currently happening in the world and I wondered if we would ever learn from our past…


permalink written by  kmr788 on July 6, 2009 from Dachau, Germany
from the travel blog: Dublin, Ireland
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