What I feel like living in a foreign country (five months in)

Monday, May 27, 2019

Somehow five months, almost half of Ryan's school year, is behind us. It it beautiful here! It's getting warm but not too warm, all the trees have leafed out and the parks look incredible, and it's just a a gorgeous place to be!
I wanted to write down a little breakdown of my feelings over the last five months, so I can always go back and have a peek into my mind at this point in our lives here. :) And people always ask me what it's like to live abroad, but so much of that is actually what it feels like to live abroad. There are always fun things to do (like taking whirlwind trips to Italy and restaurant-hopping and nailing European fashion), and those are the fabulous things you (and other people) envision when you think about living in a foreign country. But you also have to grocery shop in a place that doesn't use the same ingredients as you, and communicate with your Dutch insurance provider about something kinda complicated, and sometimes you just feel out of place and like a burden to the locals. Then other times you feel like you are totally settled and content in your home! It's exactly what my other friends and family have said about living internationally. My feelings go all over the place during a given week!

And this is just my personal experience. :)

78% of the time: Woo we live here! In the Netherlands! : I. love. living. here! There's so much Ollie and I can do during the long days while Ryan is in class. When I plan out our days, I've become familiar enough with the city that a lot of things come to mind, instead of the abyss that once was my idea pool in regards to things to do on a day-to-day basis. Exploring new parts of our city and really owning the fact that we live in such a cool city as Rotterdam is the best. And of course we try to pack in as many trips to other places as possible, and we'd do more if it wasn't for Ryan's pesky school. ;) I look forward to the next days and weeks here. I love the parks, the weather, the flowers and beautiful gardens everywhere, the Centrum area, the riverfront, the old brick rowhouses in our neighborhood, and mooore. My personal favorite part about living in Rotterdam is biking everywhere, and every time I hop on my bike with Ollie I can't help but smile. The friends we've met are HEAVEN SENT humans. Also, pretty proud of the progress I've made in everything, and how far I've come since my first grocery store trip, ha. Life is good here!

7% of the time: FOMO : Are we taking advantage of this time enough? Do we have enough trips planned?! Are we going to be able to do everything we want to do?! I swear we are going to look back on this time and feel like we wasted EVERY. DAY. Research alllllll the cities! How is it already May?! This is going to be over BEFORE WE KNOW IT.

5% of the time: Sucky-sad-lonely-and-homesick : Mostly just comes when I've been sick, or when Ryan's had a super busy period at school and I'm exhausted mentally and physically from day 7 of it just being Ollie and I from 8am to 9pm. You miss family and friends in the US. You start to really miss understanding what people around you are saying, and understanding the signs on the street and at the store, and understanding the ads on your phone. You feel a little isolated. You might really miss Cafe Rio and Swig 😜 and just familiarity. You get annoyed working "so hard" to do things that were once a breeze - reading recipes, using the correct units of measurement, finding the right foods at the grocery store, finding out which store carries a specific product you need ("I need bleach, like the chemical for disinfecting. No, not like toilet cleaner. No, not like de-scaler. No - BLEACH!"). It's not ever in a sense of "I just want to leave and never come back!" but more like "I'm a little tired of lots of changes. It would be great to have something familiar-feeling." 

10% of the time: Overwhellllllmed : I need to get our Residence Permits! BSNs! Insurance! A doctor! (That stuff is all over with now but it was a HUGE stressor for like three months since it took so long for our residence permits to be approved) I need to get friends! Find the right ingredients to make meals we like! Buy the right cleaning supplies for my house! Pay our internet bill! Ask questions to our property manager! Get Oliver enough socialization! All in Dutch and I'll probably look sooooo stupid like a million times and ugh I just don't want to deal with that right now!!

So anyhow, there's that. It's such a fun adventure being here! But it's also just normal life and sometimes you just want to find chocolate chips for eating and maybe for cookies and then FOR SOME REASON chocolate chips are not a thing in the Netherlands like at all and you can't find them anywhere and you get real sad.

Lately though, the blue skies usually find Ollie and I at a park or biking to the Maritime Museum, and we are over the lack of chocolate chips here and are just happy. We are also so excited to find new things to do as summer (and a little easier class schedule for Ryan) comes. Bring on the sunny days!

Our neighborhood

Sunday, May 5, 2019

I started this post in March, when everything outside was still pretty bare but with a few little buds trying to poke their heads out. Now it's May when I'm finishing this up, and everything has been gorgeous and green for weeks! So anyways, you're going to get pictures from both winter and spring in here.

We live in Kralingen and we LOVE it! This area is east of Rotterdam city center, by about 20 minutes by bike. We were drawn to its location next to Ryan's university, its gorgeous neighborhoods, the abundance of families we saw everywhere, its quieter streets lined with old twisty trees, and the nearby huuuge wooded park with a lake (Kralingse Bos & Plas, which you'll probably see a lot of on here!). And now that we're actually living here, we were so right to pick this place! I couldn't love it any more. Ryan's commute is a five-minute bike ride, our area is SO quiet and family-friendly, and we're just a block south of the lake so with a hop onto our bikes, we're lakeside in four minutes.
So read on for a massive post about my love affair with everything in our perfect Kralingen!

The general greeny watery goodness.

I love biking around downtown and I love the feel of the city, but when I finish errands and get back out to our area, I just feel peace. And I think a huge part of that is due to the green spaces and canals.
Central Rotterdam was completely flattened by German bombings during WWII because of its massive river port, but Kralingen was spared. It gives such a neat peek into Rotterdam in the late 1800s. Most of the central city's canals weren't included in the reconstruction after the war, but we luckily still have a lot, and Ollie and I love them, love them, love them.
^^The trail on the route to Ryan's school.
How lovely are the little flowers they put in the medians? ^^ Sometimes they're just scattered naturally, like this, and other times they've been planted in the prettiest swirling patterns!
Our views off the back balcony. The birdsongs we get all day are heaven.

The 100-year-old homes and streets

Kralingen was originally a separate village where Rotterdam's high society kept summer homes and gorgeous estates, and as we ride through these unreal pre-WWII streets each day to go to the store or the metro station, alls I'm gonna say is my face looks like 😍. Every stinking time.
I wish I could say we live in one of these! I love the brick, the varying window shapes, the stained glass accents, the rooftop architecture, the trim choices, the front doors, the gardens...
 I was SO fascinated to see these tiles in the sidewalk on our way home from date night one evening, a couple blocks from our apartment. Over the past few years we had seen them in Salzburg and Amsterdam, but I hadn't once seen them in Rotterdam yet. And now, we always say hello to Flora and Hendrik when we pass their home. It's a humbling and really emotional experience to see these outside the front doors of real families who lived real lives. I think it's such a powerful way to remember the victims of the Holocaust. (https://www.npr.org/2012/05/31/153943491/stumbling-upon-miniature-memorials-to-nazi-victims?t=1559052875464 for more information)

 Kralingse Plas & Bos

We had some weirdly warm weeks during February, and whenever the temperature was hospitable enough, Ollie and I would bike to Kralingse Bos! It became our happy place amidst a move that hadn't gone as planned and the loneliness of missing Ryan while he was at class until late at night. Flash forward to now, and yep, we somehow love it even more.
Kralingse Plas (the lake) is surrounded by Kralingse Bos (the forest), which has biking/walking/equestrian paths weaving all throughout it, plus three or four playgrounds, several restaurants, a petting zoo, and a deer farm. We still need to tour the working windmills!
The dozens of footbridges are always a hit with Oliver. Throw allll the sticks!
It's perfect.
Always so happy when we can have Ryan with us!
 This was during his stick phase (see his left hand), when he always had to have a stick in his hand. This ended about a month ago. The end of an era. 😢

 The other gorgeous parks

Park Rozenberg was actually the park Ollie and I went to on our first day on our own (Ryan's first day of class)! The beginning of a lovely relationship!
Rozenburg definitely received elevated status in Oliver's eyes 
when some DIGGERS showed up one day!!!

Our personal fav is Ypenhof. An estate once belonging to a Dutch shipbuilder in the 1800s, and now a public green space. It couldn't be any closer to us and it is super super well taken care of, rarely busy at all, and full of neat trails and bridges over some gorgeous ponds. Also all the trees have tags with their species written on them! I love that.
^^ Investigating some cypress knees.
^^Walking like a kitty, obviously.
Nature walk treasures! Pinecone is like his favorite word these days...
And his favorite fact to recite is "Aycohns come fromma OOK tree!" I'm so proud.
How gorgeous is that glassy water?!

The playgrounds!

There are "speeltuins" scattered all over Kralingen. Some are free, some you pay like .50 euro to get in. So many of them have bathrooms and some have snack stands and shady places to eat. I love Dutch playgrounds!
Something I love about Dutch culture is the emphasis on enjoying life and doing so playfully! The playgrounds here show that. Honestly, US playgrounds seem sissy in comparison to these, and this is why: Dutch playgrounds still have a lot of the structures that have disappeared from US playgrounds due to the playground getting blamed for a kid getting hurt. Here, if the kid gets hurt, it's just how life goes, and there's not a mad scramble to place blame and make someone pay. I love that philosophy.
Pushing some "buttons" in his fire engine.

I'm sure I'll have a Part Two to this love story as the year goes on, but that's just the start. We love our neighborhood!


 

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