Friday, August 27, 2010

Orientation.

Okay kids, I know I've been a little out of touch these past 3 days but for good reason: the good people at H@nken decided to extend our orientation over 2 days, in case we missed something the first 27 times it was explained to us. Now I realize that sounds whiny but I'll tell you why it ended up being a really good thing: because we all focused on each other!

Over the past 3 days, I've had time to meet at least a dozen new people, exchange names with a few more and look forward to taking classes with completely different people as well. I've already signed up for my 2 first classes in the first period [1 semester = period 1 + period 2].

The most interesting orientation talks we had consisted of a prof standing in the middle of the auditorium, pretending he was Brussels, and asking us to place ourselves around him geographically. That made for a really interesting depiction of where everyone was from. Also, it made it 100% easy to locate my new Canadian buddy from Saskatchewan, Nicole! [This was the introduction session for Masters and exchange students. Thus the insanely diversified world map we created.] My second favourite talk was done by the Green Office guy and he spoke to us about the importance of keeping H@nken green. He had a good sense of humour and kept it short - so it was memorable and we'll be keeping it green on H@nken's behalf as a result. Go travel coffee mugs! "Maailmaan paras isä!" ...jne.

Today was a pretty boring day in terms of information. We found out we need to bring the original copies of our diplomas in for "registration." This made me angry as we needed to send in lawyer attested copies ($50) and then I left mine in Canada so shipping costs ($60?) plus risk of it being lost... (iunno how much it costs to replace but you know mAcGill will milk it for all its worth...) soooo... perhaps I can keep on begging them to let me bring it after Christmas? I think that's a good plan... for now...we'll see...

ALSO, we heard from the student union about the Welcome Dinner, Sept 10th, the cottage weekend, Sept 18-19, the St-Petersburg trip ... and more to come! I'm really looking forward to it all.

Jackie is coming back on Tuesday afternoon and I'll be in Tampere by the evening on Tuesday. I need to skip class on Wednesday morning (already) because there's no point rushing back for a 1.5h lecture... but at some point I need to sign my HO@S agreement and get the keys to my new crib!

On a final note, I love this song because it calmed me down as I was getting in to Helsinki on Wednesday afternoon. Santogold's I'm a Lady. Enjoy: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PpL8odTN2_c


Photo credits: here.

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

The Beginning of Yet Another Chapter.

How appropriate that this is my 95th post... since my German blog had 94 posts and my Finnish blog had 94 before this one, I have equated Mannheim with Tampere in the blogverse, only to start at 1 in Helsinki.

Today was my first day entering the Hanken building... as you can imagine (or read from my previous post), I've been super nervous, stressed and scared these past few days. I ended up not sleeping last night because of stress, excitement and wayyy too much reading of Stieg Larsson's The Girl who Kicked the Hornet's Nest.

But the point is, and I knew that it would be, that there was no reason for all that anxiety. The people I've met so far are all in the same boat and all seem really friendly. Hanken has welcomed us with open arms and we discussed the program in a nice small meeting between 20 people. We were served champagne and finger-foods! The program director seems really great - not only is she amazingly nice but she's well organized and takes a personal interest in helping everyone out.

Tomorrow the official orientation starts at 9am! I'll have more to write after that ;)

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Mini-stress?

I'm not sure how capable I am of having a melt-down due to stress because I really can't say I've been stressed about much these past few months. That being said, I know myself to be capable of increased amounts of feeling overwhelmed [illiterate much? I know. :/ ]...

So here I am, trying to plan my schedule for this coming period [1 semester = 2 periods], without a place to live in Helsinki [Thanks student housing association! If I applied 4 months early, then who the hell got all the spots?] and without fully understanding how the system works. I don't know if I need to do this right now... but we're in grad school. I am not under the impression that I'm gonna go to orientation and someone will hold my hand and help me figure this out. Nor do I want to send people 100 emails asking questions which may be answered next week. But having learned from experience and some 'oh-so-helpful' advisors at McGill, if they're gonna do anything in the first week, they'll make you cry. [That man was evil. And I'm not the only person he made cry.] Okay so as this story gets progressively more confusing and you can tell I haven't been in school for awhile, I'm unsure about the point of this post haha.

Point being:
- I'm taking 2 courses in the first period. They are Mon/Tues at 8:30am and 2:30pm so I should make some friends asap so I don't hang out alone for the 4 and a half hour break.
- I want to join some clubs and actually get involved in school stuff this time around... not to mention a job. A job would be SOLID.
- I want to take a Finnish conversation course here in Tampere but it's on Wednesday evenings and my 2nd period will slightly resemble Satan's face...with and without that course... and even worse without an apartment.
- I'm trying to find other Finnish courses I could take but every website has its own hoops to jump through.
- I'm also looking for an active and a creative course to fill my time with... so any suggestions for places or even activities to give me a starting point would be greatly appreciated.

Kbye.

P.S. I heart The National.

Friday, August 20, 2010

Scandinavia.

Now as many of you may know, Finland is not part of Scandinavia. I think the distinction is that it's part of the Scandinavian agreement for free mobility and other parks but it's not geographically part of the Scandinavian peninsula. I just looked at a map and it's a little sketchy.. because of all the land in between. But you get the idea. I had been living in Finland for 7 months and I had never been to Scandinavia. So Jackie and I set out to explore Norway and Sweden.

We first took a train from Tampere to Turku. Took the boat from Turku to Stockholm. Flew to Bergen from Stockholm and took a train from Bergen to Oslo, before flying back to our respective places thereafter.

I managed to see old friends in each city. We met Christian in Stockholm and he accompanied us to Bergen, where we stayed with Elisabeth for a night and got to enjoy her company the next day as well. Then Jackie and I sailed solo to Oslo where we got a most sophisticated tour from Andreas and stayed with some family friends who I hadn't met before, but who made us feel right at home: Jeni, Daniel and Andrei.

So without going into too many details, I can say that we saw some beautiful places in the company of wonderful people!

And as the most random side-note, during our last morning in Oslo, we assisted at a Starfish funeral. While walking along the harbor and stopping to laugh at a kiss-and-sail sign, I noticed a starfish had died on land. I found something to gently lift him with and threw him in the water. [Now I'm really hoping that he wasn't alive and that I killed him. But it seemed pretty obvious that he was dead.] So I took a few pictures of the occasion and I have no idea why I felt compelled to post them, let alone mention this on my blog.


Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Weekday Veg.

I recently became a big fan of www.ted.com. I'd heard of it a long time ago and had watched videos on occasion but it wasn't before I spent an entire evening on the site that I can honestly proclaim it as falling in love.

Among the first few videos I saw was by Graham Hill titled "Why I am a weekday vegetarian." And so... I was inspired. I haven't been eating that much meat lately. I've been freaking out about the environment for almost a year now [yes, that sounds like a short time but let's say it's since become an active worry that troubles me and I think about frequently since then.]

The name is pretty self-explanatory... you are a vegetarian during the week, and on weekends, you get to choose. This way, you "don't let perfect become the enemy of the good," and you still reduce your meat intake. Additionally, you don't really sacrifice anything dramatically, such as YOUR LAST PIECE OF STEAK...but overall, you're leading a lifestyle that's balanced. In the long term, you're also trying out the possibility of being a full-time vegetarian and for some, vegans. I actually have a friend who's vegetarian who was thinking about trying something similar with veganism. But hey, no pressure, it's a personal choice and I just wanted to share this video with you all. I only just started yesterday.

Graham Hill: Why I'm a weekday vegetarian | Video on TED.com

Monday, August 2, 2010

Radical Ninja.

On Saturday, July 31st Radical Ninja played at O'Hara - their first show since September 2009. The band consists of Jonne, Juha, Hege and Tuomo. The occasion drew out lots of old friends and familiar faces, none of which were disappointed! Now I wish I had pictures to show you but I do not...

The guys have been working on some new zombie-related stuff but they also played old favourites such as Ballyhoo and Cumshot. Comedy, dancing and devoted [and unknown] fans were all part of the package, making Saturday a memorable night for great music in good company! [I will try to find some pictures.]

Meanwhile, check out Radical Ninja on Myspace: www.myspace.com/radicalninjaband !

Sunday, August 1, 2010

My 90th post...

This blog is catching up to the old German blog and with this post, I will have posted a whooping 90 posts! [The German blog got up to 94 posts in total, none of which are open to the public anymore... sorry - I messed up and put my name in there somewhere.]

So point being, hi August! How have you arrived upon us so quickly?
This summer in Finland has been stupendous! I tutor twice a week for fun and spare change. Otherwise, the remaining 166 hours of my week are spent sleeping, eating ice cream, riding my bike, doing 1000 piece puzzles [or should I say A 1000 piece puzzle... though there are talks of a second being attempted after the first is completed], listening to music, going to the beach and swimming in the lake everyday and basically, living at WokWok part-time [where my friends work and spend most of their waking hours.]...oh and the fact that I spent over 11 hours watching extended editions of all the Lord of the Rings movies should also be mentioned as an activity.

Next Thursday my friend Jackie is flying in from Canada and I'm heading to Helsinki to get her from the airport. Then we have a few free days in and around Tampere to do as we please before we set off on our Scandinavian Adventure: Stockholm, Bergen and Oslo.

Speaking of Helsinki, I haven't heard anything about housing there yet and I'm wondering when/if I should try and find a private apartment for rent [since Helsinki has such reasonable prices of 500e/month for your home sweet 12m2 flats!] But we'll see... I'm supposed to hear back this month. And actually, the first orientation meeting is in the evening on August 25th... so less than 24 days left! Gah.!